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@InProceedings{APGV10-nfar,
author = {Gurjot Singh and J. Edward {Swan~II} and J. Adam Jones and
Stephen R. Ellis},
title = {Depth Judgment Measures and Occluding Surfaces in
Near-Field Augmented Reality},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the ACM SIGGRAPH Symposium on Applied Perception in
Graphics and Visualization (APGV 2010)},
year = 2010,
location = {Los Angeles, California, USA},
date = {July 23--24},
month = {July},
pages = {149--156},
note = {DOI: 10.1145/1836248.1836277.}
abstract = {
In this paper we describe an apparatus and experiment that measured
depth judgments in augmented reality at near-field distances of 34 to
50 centimeters. The experiment compared perceptual matching, a
closed-loop task for measuring depth judgments, with blind reaching, a
visually open-loop task for measuring depth judgments. The experiment
also studied the effect of a highly salient occluding surface
appearing behind, coincident with, and in front of a virtual object.
The apparatus and closed-loop matching task were based on previous
work by Ellis and Menges. The experiment found maximum average depth
judgment errors of 5.5 cm, and found that the blind reaching judgments
were less accurate than the perceptual matching judgments. The
experiment found that the presence of a highly-salient occluding
surface has a complicated effect on depth judgments, but does not lead
to systematically larger or smaller errors.
},
}