A Replication Study to Measure the Perceived Three-Dimensional Location of Virtual Objects in Optical See Through Augmented Reality
Farzana Alam Khan, Mohammed Safayet Arefin, Nate Phillips, and J. Edward Swan II. A Replication Study to Measure the Perceived Three-Dimensional Location of Virtual Objects in Optical See Through Augmented Reality. In IEEE Conference on Virtual Reality and 3D User Interfaces Abstracts and Workshops (VRW 2022), pp. 796–797, IEEE Computer Society, March 2022. DOI: 10.1109/VRW55335.2022.00249.
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Abstract
An important research question in optical see-through (OST) augmented reality(AR) is, how accurately and precisely can a virtual object's real world location be perceived? Previously, a method was developed to measure the perceived three-dimensional location of virtual objects in OST AR. In this research, a replication study is reported, which examined whether the perceived location of virtual objects are biased in the direction of the dominant eye. The successful replication analysis suggests that perceptual accuracy is not biased in the direction of the dominant eye. Compared to the previous study's findings, overall perceptual accuracy increased, and precision was similar.
BibTeX
@InProceedings{IEEEVR22-r3dl, author = {Farzana Alam Khan and Mohammed Safayet Arefin and Nate Phillips and J. Edward {Swan~II}}, title = {A Replication Study to Measure the Perceived Three-Dimensional Location of Virtual Objects in Optical See Through Augmented Reality}, booktitle = {IEEE Conference on Virtual Reality and 3D User Interfaces Abstracts and Workshops (VRW 2022)}, year = 2022, location = {Christchurch, New Zealand}, publisher = {IEEE Computer Society}, date = {March 12--16}, month = {March}, pages = {796--797}, note = {DOI: <a target="_blank" href="https://doi.org/10.1109/VRW55335.2022.00249"> 10.1109/VRW55335.2022.00249</a>.}, abstract = { An important research question in optical see-through (OST) augmented reality (AR) is, how accurately and precisely can a virtual object's real world location be perceived? Previously, a method was developed to measure the perceived three-dimensional location of virtual objects in OST AR. In this research, a replication study is reported, which examined whether the perceived location of virtual objects are biased in the direction of the dominant eye. The successful replication analysis suggests that perceptual accuracy is not biased in the direction of the dominant eye. Compared to the previous study's findings, overall perceptual accuracy increased, and precision was similar. }, }