Authors
Peter Vangorp, Rafat K Mantiuk, Bartosz Bazyluk, Karol Myszkowski, Radosław Mantiuk, Simon J Watt, Hans-Peter Seidel
Publication date
2014/8/8
Book
Proceedings of the ACM symposium on applied perception
Pages
71-78
Description
Many people who first see a high dynamic range (HDR) display get the impression that it is a 3D display, even though it does not produce any binocular depth cues. Possible explanations of this effect include contrast-based depth induction and the increased realism due to the high brightness and contrast that makes an HDR display "like looking through a window". In this paper we test both of these hypotheses by comparing the HDR depth illusion to real binocular depth cues using a carefully calibrated HDR stereoscope. We confirm that contrast-based depth induction exists, but it is a vanishingly weak depth cue compared to binocular depth cues. We also demonstrate that for some observers, the increased contrast of HDR displays indeed increases the realism. However, it is highly observer-dependent whether reduced, physically correct, or exaggerated contrast is perceived as most realistic, even in the …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
P Vangorp, RK Mantiuk, B Bazyluk, K Myszkowski… - Proceedings of the ACM symposium on applied …, 2014