3D fatigue from stereoscopic 3D video displays: Comparing objective and subjective tests using electroencephalography
conference contribution
posted on 2024-11-03, 14:03authored bySiu Ming Choy, Kwok Ho Chiu, Eva Cheng, Ian Burnett
The use of stereoscopic display has increased in recent times, with a growing range of applications using 3D videos for visual entertainment, data visualization, and medical applications. However, stereoscopic 3D video can lead to adverse reactions amongst some viewers, including visual fatigue, headache and nausea; such reactions can further lead to Visually Induced Motion Sickness (VIMS). Whilst motion sickness symptoms can occur from other types of visual displays,this paper investigates the rapid adjustment triggered by human pupils as a potential cause of 3D fatigue due to VIMS from stereoscopic 3D displays. Using Electroencephalogram (EEG) biosignals and eye blink tools to measure the 3D fatigue, a series of objective and subjective experiments were conducted to investigate the effect of stereoscopic 3D across a series of video sequences.
History
Start page
761
End page
764
Total pages
4
Outlet
Proceedings of the IEEE Region 10 Annual International Conference (TENCON 2015)
Name of conference
TENCON 2015: Academic-Reseach-Industrial Collaboration: Challenges and Opportunities in Electrical, Electronic, Computer, Communication and Information Engineering