How late can you update gaze-contingent multiresolutional displays without detection?

Abstract

This study investigated perceptual disruptions in gaze-contingent multiresolutional displays (GCMRDs) due to delays in updating the center of highest resolution after an eye movement. GCMRDs can be used to save processing resources and transmission bandwidth in many types of single-user display applications, such as virtual reality, video-telephony, simulators, and remote piloting. The current study found that image update delays as late as 60 ms after an eye movement did not significantly increase the detectability of image blur and/or motion transients due to the update. This is good news for designers of GCMRDs, since 60 ms is ample time to update many GCMRDs after an eye movement without disrupting perception. The study also found that longer eye movements led to greater blur and/or transient detection due to moving the eyes further into the low-resolution periphery, effectively reducing the image resolution at fixation prior to the update. In GCMRD applications where longer saccades are more likely (e.g., displays with relatively large distances between objects), this problem could be overcome by increasing the size of the region of highest resolution.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Dec 01, 2007
Source ID
10.1145/1314303.1314310

Entities

People

  • Gary S. Wolverton
  • Lester C Loschky

Organizations

  • Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology
  • Kansas State University
  • National Institute of Mental Health
  • United States Army Research Laboratory
  • University of Illinois Urbana–Champaign

Tags

Readers

  • Brain and Cognitive Science; Experimental Psychology; Cognitive Neuroscience
  • Database Systems and Applications
  • Image Processing and Computer Vision.