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1.
Nat Commun ; 15(1): 2907, 2024 Apr 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38649369

ABSTRACT

Holographic displays can generate light fields by dynamically modulating the wavefront of a coherent beam of light using a spatial light modulator, promising rich virtual and augmented reality applications. However, the limited spatial resolution of existing dynamic spatial light modulators imposes a tight bound on the diffraction angle. As a result, modern holographic displays possess low étendue, which is the product of the display area and the maximum solid angle of diffracted light. The low étendue forces a sacrifice of either the field-of-view (FOV) or the display size. In this work, we lift this limitation by presenting neural étendue expanders. This new breed of optical elements, which is learned from a natural image dataset, enables higher diffraction angles for ultra-wide FOV while maintaining both a compact form factor and the fidelity of displayed contents to human viewers. With neural étendue expanders, we experimentally achieve 64 × étendue expansion of natural images in full color, expanding the FOV by an order of magnitude horizontally and vertically, with high-fidelity reconstruction quality (measured in PSNR) over 29 dB on retinal-resolution images.

2.
Nat Commun ; 15(1): 66, 2024 Jan 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38169467

ABSTRACT

Near-eye displays are fundamental technology in the next generation computing platforms for augmented reality and virtual reality. However, there are remaining challenges to deliver immersive and comfortable visual experiences to users, such as compact form factor, solving vergence-accommodation conflict, and achieving a high resolution with a large eyebox. Here we show a compact holographic near-eye display concept that combines the advantages of waveguide displays and holographic displays to overcome the challenges towards true 3D holographic augmented reality glasses. By modeling the coherent light interactions and propagation via the waveguide combiner, we demonstrate controlling the output wavefront using a spatial light modulator located at the input coupler side. The proposed method enables 3D holographic displays via exit-pupil expanding waveguide combiners, providing a large software-steerable eyebox. It also offers additional advantages such as resolution enhancement capability by suppressing phase discontinuities caused by pupil replication process. We build prototypes to verify the concept with experimental results and conclude the paper with discussion.

3.
Opt Express ; 27(26): 38289-38311, 2019 Dec 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31878599

ABSTRACT

State-of-the-art near-eye displays often compromise on eye box size to maintain a wide field of view, necessitating a means for steering the eye box to maintain alignment with a moving eye. The design space of such pupil-steered systems is not well defined and the implications of imperfect steering on the perceived image are not well understood. To better characterize the pupil steering design space, we introduce a generalized taxonomy of pupil-steered architectures that considers both system and ocular factors that affect steering performance. We also develop an optical model of a generalized pupil-steered system with a wide-field schematic eye to simulate the retinal image. Using this framework, we systematically characterize retinal image quality for different combinations of design parameters. The results of these simulations provide an overview of the pupil steering design space and help determine relevant psychophysical experiments for further evaluation.


Subject(s)
Image Enhancement , Pupil/physiology , Retina/anatomy & histology , Humans , Models, Biological , Rotation
4.
IEEE Comput Graph Appl ; 32(5): 6-11, 2012.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24806982

ABSTRACT

Light fields are the multiview extension of stereo image pairs: a collection of images showing a 3D scene from slightly different perspectives. Depicting high-resolution light fields usually requires an excessively large display bandwidth; compressive light field displays are enabled by the codesign of optical elements and computational-processing algorithms. Rather than pursuing a direct "optical" solution (for example, adding one more pixel to support the emission of one additional light ray), compressive displays aim to create flexible optical systems that can synthesize a compressed target light field. In effect, each pixel emits a superposition of light rays. Through compression and tailored optical designs, fewer display pixels are necessary to emit a given light field than a direct optical solution would require.

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