T.A.R.S.I.E.R.
Tarsiers have eyes larger than their brains, which make these unique small animals adapt and rotate their heads almost 360° to look around without moving their eyes or body. Like tarsiers, humans in XR headsets adapt to conflicts between the image and dynamics of their body, head, eyes, and eye lenses.
The T.A.R.S.I.E.R. project (Telepresence Augmented Reality Stereo Image Ergonomics and Resolution) is an extension of Anna Ptukha’s research in the neuroscience of perception, which started in Paris and continued in Helsinki University. The project validates algorithms to improve stereo resolution, reduce double vision, visual fatigue, as well as XR sickness for human operators who need to perform long and demanding tasks, such as telesurgery or remote human-robot collaboration.
Contact
Anna Ptukha, Doctoral researcher
Faculty of Medicine / Cognitive Brain Research Unit
Doctoral programme Brain & Mind
Email: anna.ptukha(at)helsinki.fi
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