The present disclosure relates to light field displays and applications, and, in particular, to a binocular light field display, adjusted pixel rendering method therefor, and vision correction system and method using same.
Individuals routinely wear corrective lenses to accommodate for reduced vision acuity in consuming images and/or information rendered, for example, on digital displays provided, for example, in day-to-day electronic devices such as smartphones, smart watches, electronic readers, tablets, laptop computers and the like, but also provided as part of vehicular dashboard displays and entertainment systems, to name a few examples. The use of bifocals or progressive corrective lenses is also commonplace for individuals suffering from near and far sightedness.
The operating systems of current electronic devices having graphical displays offer certain “Accessibility” features built into the software of the device to attempt to provide users with reduced vision the ability to read and view content on the electronic device. Specifically, current accessibility options include the ability to invert images, increase the image size, adjust brightness and contrast settings, bold text, view the device display only in grey, and for those with legal blindness, the use of speech technology. These techniques focus on the limited ability of software to manipulate display images through conventional image manipulation, with limited success.
The use of 4D light field displays with lenslet arrays or parallax barriers to correct visual aberrations have since been proposed by Pamplona et al. (PAMPLONA, V., OLIVEIRA, M., ALIAGA, D., AND RASKAR, R. 2012. “Tailored displays to compensate for visual aberrations.” ACM Trans. Graph. (SIGGRAPH) 31.). Unfortunately, conventional light field displays as used by Pamplona et al. are subject to a spatio-angular resolution trade-off; that is, an increased angular resolution decreases the spatial resolution. Hence, the viewer sees a sharp image but at the expense of a significantly lower resolution than that of the screen. To mitigate this effect, Huang et al. (see, HUANG, F.-C., AND BARSKY, B. 2011. A framework for aberration compensated displays. Tech. Rep. UCB/EECS-2011-162, University of California, Berkeley, December; and HUANG, F.-C., LANMAN, D., BARSKY, B. A., AND RASKAR, R. 2012. Correcting for optical aberrations using multi layer displays. ACM Trans. Graph. (SiGGRAPH Asia) 31, 6, 185:1-185:12) proposed the use of multilayer display designs together with prefiltering. The combination of prefiltering and these particular optical setups, however, significantly reduces the contrast of the resulting image.
In U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2016/0042501 Fu-Chung Huang, Gordon Wetzstein, Brian A. Barsky, and Ramesh Raskar. “Eyeglasses-free Display: Towards Correcting Visual Aberrations with Computational Light Field Displays”. ACM Transaction on Graphics, xx:0, August 2014, the entire contents of each of which are hereby incorporated herein by reference, the combination of viewer-adaptive pre-filtering with off-the-shelf parallax barriers has been proposed to increase contrast and resolution, at the expense however, of computation time and power.
All of the abovementioned publications address the use of light field displays for vision correction in one eye (monocular vision correction). Expanding such platforms for binocular vision correction, however, has proved challenging, as acknowledged by Huang in HUANG, F.-C. 2013. A Computational Light Field Display for Correcting Visual Aberrations.” UCB/EECS-2013-206, University of California, Berkeley).
This background information is provided to reveal information believed by the applicant to be of possible relevance. No admission is necessarily intended, nor should be construed, that any of the preceding information constitutes prior art.
The following presents a simplified summary of the general inventive concept(s) described herein to provide a basic understanding of some aspects of the disclosure. This summary is not an extensive overview of the disclosure. It is not intended to restrict key or critical elements of embodiments of the disclosure or to delineate their scope beyond that which is explicitly or implicitly described by the following description and claims.
A need exists for a binocular light field display, adjusted pixel rendering method therefor, and vision correction system and method using same that overcome some of the drawbacks of known techniques, or at least, provides a useful alternative thereto. Some aspects of this disclosure provide embodiments of such systems and methods.
In accordance with one aspect, there is provided a system to produce a perception adjustment of an input image for a user, the system comprising: a pupil tracking device operable to track respective pupil locations; a digital light field display comprising a set of pixels and a corresponding set of light field shaping elements that at least partially govern a light field emanated thereby to define spatially periodically recurring view zones within which to produce a perceptively adjusted version of the input image; a digital data processor operable on pixel data to produce said perceptively adjusted version of the input image within said view zones, and further operable to: receive as input said respective pupil locations; and adjust said pixel data to actively translate a boundary of said view zones so to reduce overlap of said boundary with each of said respective pupil locations.
In one embodiment, the view zones define a primary view zone that encompasses each of said respective pupil locations.
In one embodiment, the primary view zone is defined as a substantially laterally elongated view zone so to accommodate each of said respective pupil locations.
In one embodiment, the substantially laterally elongated view zone is defined as having a hexagonal cross section.
In one embodiment, the view zones define respective view zones that respectively encompass a respective one of said respective pupil locations.
In one embodiment, the view zones are defined as substantially laterally elongated view zones.
In one embodiment, the substantially laterally elongated view zones are defined as having a hexagonal cross section.
In one embodiment, a primary axis of said substantially laterally elongated view zones is rotated relative to a line connecting said respective pupil locations.
In one embodiment, the perceptively adjusted version of the input image corresponds with a visual acuity correction defined for the user.
In one embodiment, the digital data processor is operable on pixel data to produce distinct perceptively adjusted versions of the input image within respective areas of said view zones so to respectively coincide the respective areas with said respective pupil locations.
In one embodiment, the digital data processor is further operable to adjust said pixel data to actively translate said boundary so to improve alignment of said respective areas with said respective pupil locations.
In one embodiment, the perceptively adjusted versions correspond with respective visual acuity corrections defined for each of the user's eyes.
In one embodiment, the perceptively adjusted versions result in a three-dimensional visual effect.
In accordance with another aspect, there is provided a method, to be automatically implemented by a digital processor operatively associated with a light field display comprising a set of pixels and a corresponding set of light field shaping elements arranged in a designated geometry, to render a perception adjustment of an input image, the method comprising: receiving as input respective pupil locations; computing adjusted pixel data to be rendered via the light field display so to produce a perceptively adjusted version of the input image within spatially periodically recurring view zones defined at least in part as a function of the designated geometry of the light field display; actively translating a boundary of said view zones so to reduce overlap of said boundary with each of said respective pupil locations; and rendering said adjusted pixel data so to produce said perceptively adjusted version of the input image within said actively translated view zones.
In one embodiment, the view zones define a primary view zone that encompasses each of said respective pupil locations.
In one embodiment, the primary view zone is defined as a substantially laterally elongated view zone so to accommodate each of said respective pupil locations.
In one embodiment, the substantially laterally elongated view zone is defined as having a hexagonal cross section.
In one embodiment, the view zones define respective view zones that respectively encompass a respective one of said respective pupil locations.
In one embodiment, the view zones are defined as substantially laterally elongated view zones.
In one embodiment, the substantially laterally elongated view zones are defined as having a hexagonal cross section.
In one embodiment, a primary axis of said substantially laterally elongated view zones is rotated relative to a line connecting said respective pupil locations.
In one embodiment, the perceptively adjusted version of the input image corresponds with a visual acuity correction defined for the user.
In one embodiment, the producing said perceptively adjusted version of the input image within said view zones comprises producing distinct perceptively adjusted versions of the input image within respective areas of said view zones so to respectively coincide the respective areas with said respective pupil locations.
In one embodiment, the actively translating said boundary comprises actively translating said boundary so to improve alignment of said respective areas with said respective pupil locations.
In one embodiment, the perceptively adjusted versions correspond with respective visual acuity corrections defined for each of the user's eyes.
In one embodiment, the perceptively adjusted versions result in a three-dimensional visual effect.
In accordance with another aspect, there is provided a non-transitory computer-readable medium comprising digital instructions to be implemented by one or more digital processors operatively associated with a light field display, the light field display comprising a set of pixels and a corresponding set of light field shaping elements arranged in a designated geometry, so to produce a perception adjustment of an input image by: receiving as input respective pupil locations; computing adjusted pixel data to be rendered via the light field display so to produce a perceptively adjusted version of the input image within spatially periodically recurring view zones defined at least in part as a function of the designated geometry of the light field display; actively translating a boundary of said view zones so to reduce overlap of said boundary with each of said respective pupil locations; and rendering said adjusted pixel data so to produce said perceptively adjusted version of the input image within said actively translated view zones.
In one embodiment, the view zones define a primary view zone that encompasses each of said respective pupil locations.
In one embodiment, the primary view zone is defined as a substantially laterally elongated view zone so to accommodate each of said respective pupil locations.
In one embodiment, the substantially laterally elongated view zone is defined as having a hexagonal cross section.
In one embodiment, the view zones define respective view zones that respectively encompass a respective one of said respective pupil locations.
In one embodiment, the view zones are defined as substantially laterally elongated view zones.
In one embodiment, the substantially laterally elongated view zones are defined as having a hexagonal cross section.
In one embodiment, a primary axis of said substantially laterally elongated view zones is rotated relative to a line connecting said respective pupil locations.
In one embodiment, the perceptively adjusted version of the input image corresponds with a visual acuity correction defined for the user.
In one embodiment, the digital data processor is operable on pixel data to produce distinct perceptively adjusted versions of the input image within respective areas of said view zones so to respectively coincide the respective areas with said respective pupil locations.
In one embodiment, the digital data processor is further operable to adjust said pixel data to actively translate said boundary so to improve alignment of said respective areas with said respective pupil locations.
In one embodiment, the perceptively adjusted versions correspond with respective visual acuity corrections defined for each of the user's eyes.
In one embodiment, the perceptively adjusted versions result in a three-dimensional visual effect.
In accordance with another aspect, there is provided a digital display device to render an input image for viewing by a viewer having reduced visual acuity, the device comprising: a digital display medium comprising an array of pixels and operable to render a pixelated image accordingly; an array of Light Field Shaping Elements (LFSEs), disposed relative to said digital display medium so to dispose each of said LFSE relative to a corresponding set of said pixels to shape a light field emanating therefrom and thereby at least partially govern a projection thereof from said display medium toward the viewer, wherein said array of LFSEs is defined by an elongated array of LFSEs or an array of elongated LFSEs; and a hardware processor operable on pixel data for the input image to output adjusted image pixel data to be rendered via said digital display medium and projected as at least partially governed by said LFSEs so to produce a designated image perception adjustment to at least partially address the viewer's reduced visual acuity.
In one embodiment, the elongated array is defined as an elongated or stretched hexagonal array, or an array of elongated or stretched LFSEs.
In one embodiment, a view zone in which said designated image perception adjustment produced is defined by an elongated hexagonal cross section.
In one embodiment, the LFSEs are microlenses.
In accordance with another aspect, there is provided a microlens array for use with a display medium comprising an array of pixels and operable to render a pixelated image accordingly to be viewed by a viewer having a reduced visual acuity, wherein the microlens array is dimensioned to be disposed relative to the digital display medium and comprises an array of microlenses, each one of which being disposed, when overlaid onto the digital display medium, to be centered over a corresponding set of the pixels to shape a light field emanating therefrom and thereby at least partially govern a projection thereof from the display medium toward the viewer, wherein the array of microlenses is defined by an elongated array or an array of elongated microlenses.
In one embodiment, the elongated array is defined as an elongated or stretched hexagonal array, or a hexagonal array of elongated or stretched microlenses.
Other aspects, features and/or advantages will become more apparent upon reading of the following non-restrictive description of specific embodiments thereof, given by way of example only with reference to the accompanying drawings.
Several embodiments of the present disclosure will be provided, by way of examples only, with reference to the appended drawings, wherein:
Elements in the several figures are illustrated for simplicity and clarity and have not necessarily been drawn to scale. For example, the dimensions of some of the elements in the figures may be emphasized relative to other elements for facilitating understanding of the various presently disclosed embodiments. Also, common, but well-understood elements that are useful or necessary in commercially feasible embodiments are often not depicted in order to facilitate a less obstructed view of these various embodiments of the present disclosure.
Various implementations and aspects of the specification will be described with reference to details discussed below. The following description and drawings are illustrative of the specification and are not to be construed as limiting the specification. Numerous specific details are described to provide a thorough understanding of various implementations of the present specification. However, in certain instances, well-known or conventional details are not described in order to provide a concise discussion of implementations of the present specification.
Various apparatuses and processes will be described below to provide examples of implementations of the system disclosed herein. No implementation described below limits any claimed implementation and any claimed implementations may cover processes or apparatuses that differ from those described below. The claimed implementations are not limited to apparatuses or processes having all of the features of any one apparatus or process described below or to features common to multiple or all of the apparatuses or processes described below. It is possible that an apparatus or process described below is not an implementation of any claimed subject matter.
Furthermore, numerous specific details are set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding of the implementations described herein. However, it will be understood by those skilled in the relevant arts that the implementations described herein may be practiced without these specific details. In other instances, well-known methods, procedures and components have not been described in detail so as not to obscure the implementations described herein.
In this specification, elements may be described as “configured to” perform one or more functions or “configured for” such functions. In general, an element that is configured to perform or configured for performing a function is enabled to perform the function, or is suitable for performing the function, or is adapted to perform the function, or is operable to perform the function, or is otherwise capable of performing the function.
It is understood that for the purpose of this specification, language of “at least one of X, Y, and Z” and “one or more of X, Y and Z” may be construed as X only, Y only, Z only, or any combination of two or more items X, Y, and Z (e.g., XYZ, XY, YZ, ZZ, and the like). Similar logic may be applied for two or more items in any occurrence of “at least one . . . ” and “one or more . . . ” language.
Furthermore, descriptions may include discussion of, for example, individual eye components or image properties, for clarity. It is understood that for the purpose of this specification, such descriptions may be expanded to include, for instance, more than one image to be projected to more than one eye of one or more users.
The systems and methods described herein provide, in accordance with different embodiments, different examples of a binocular light field display, adjusted pixel rendering method therefor, and vision correction system and method using same. For instance, the devices, displays and methods described herein may allow a user's perception of an input image to be displayed, or to be adjusted or altered using the light field display. For instance, in some examples, users who would otherwise require corrective eyewear such as glasses or contact lenses, or again bifocals, may consume images produced by such devices, displays and methods in clear or improved focus without the use of such eyewear. Other light field display applications, such as 3D displays and the like, may also benefit from the solutions described herein, and thus, should be considered to fall within the general scope and nature of the present disclosure.
For example, some of the herein described embodiments provide for digital display devices, or devices encompassing such displays, for use by users having reduced visual acuity, whereby images ultimately rendered by such devices can be dynamically processed to accommodate the user's reduced visual acuity so that they may consume rendered images without the use of corrective eyewear, as would otherwise be required. As noted above, embodiments are not to be limited as such by the notions and solutions described herein, but may also be applied to other technologies in which a user's perception of an input image to be displayed can be altered or adjusted via the light field display.
Generally, digital displays as considered herein will comprise a set of image rendering pixels and a corresponding set of light field shaping elements that at least partially govern a light field emanated thereby to produce a perceptively adjusted version of the input image. In some examples, light field shaping elements may take the form of a light field shaping layer or like array of optical elements to be disposed relative to the display pixels in at least partially governing the emanated light field. As described in further detail below, such light field shaping layer elements may take the form of a microlens and/or pinhole array, or other like arrays of optical elements, or again take the form of an underlying light shaping layer, such as an underlying array of optical gratings or like optical elements operable to produce a directional pixelated output.
Within the context of a light field shaping layer, as described in further detail below in accordance with some embodiments, the light field shaping layer can be disposed at a pre-set distance from the pixelated display so to controllably shape or influence a light field emanating therefrom. For instance, each light field shaping layer can be defined by an array of optical elements centered over a corresponding subset of the display's pixel array to optically influence a light field emanating therefrom and thereby govern a projection thereof from the display medium toward the user, for instance, providing some control over how each pixel or pixel group will be viewed by the viewer's eye(s). As will be further detailed below, arrayed optical elements may include, but are not limited to, lenslets, microlenses or other such diffractive optical elements that together form, for example, a lenslet array; pinholes or like apertures or windows that together form, for example, a parallax or like barrier; concentrically patterned barriers, e.g. cut outs and/or windows, such as to define a Fresnel zone plate or optical sieve, for example, and that together form a diffractive optical barrier (as described, for example, in Applicant's co-pending U.S. application Ser. No. 15/910,908, the entire contents of which are hereby incorporated herein by reference); and/or a combination thereof, such as, for example, a lenslet array whose respective lenses or lenslets are partially shadowed or barriered around a periphery thereof so to combine the refractive properties of the lenslet with some of the advantages provided by a pinhole barrier.
In operation, the display device will also generally invoke a hardware processor operable on image pixel (or subpixel) data for an image to be displayed to output corrected or adjusted image pixel data to be rendered as a function of a stored characteristic of the light field shaping elements and/or layer (e.g. layer distance from display screen, distance between optical elements (pitch), absolute relative location of each pixel or subpixel to a corresponding optical element, properties of the optical elements (size, diffractive and/or refractive properties, etc.), or other such properties, and a selected vision correction or adjustment parameter related to the user's reduced visual acuity or intended viewing experience. While light field display characteristics will generally remain static for a given implementation (i.e. a given shaping element and/or layer will be used and set for each device irrespective of the user), image processing can, in some embodiments, be dynamically adjusted as a function of the user's visual acuity or intended application so to actively adjust a distance of a virtual image plane, or perceived image on the user's retinal plane given a quantified user eye focus or like optical aberration(s), induced upon rendering the corrected/adjusted image pixel data via the static optical layer and/or elements, for example, or otherwise actively adjust image processing parameters as may be considered, for example, when implementing a viewer-adaptive pre-filtering algorithm or like approach (e.g. compressive light field optimization), so to at least in part govern an image perceived by the user's eye(s) given pixel or subpixel-specific light visible thereby through the layer.
Accordingly, a given device may be adapted to compensate for different visual acuity levels and thus accommodate different users and/or uses. For instance, a particular device may be configured to implement and/or render an interactive graphical user interface (GUI) that incorporates a dynamic vision correction scaling function that dynamically adjusts one or more designated vision correction parameter(s) in real-time in response to a designated user interaction therewith via the GUI. For example, a dynamic vision correction scaling function may comprise a graphically rendered scaling function controlled by a (continuous or discrete) user slide motion or like operation, whereby the GUI can be configured to capture and translate a user's given slide motion operation to a corresponding adjustment to the designated vision correction parameter(s) scalable with a degree of the user's given slide motion operation. These and other examples are described in Applicant's co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/246,255, the entire contents of which are hereby incorporated herein by reference.
As will be described in greater detail below, systems, devices and methods as described herein may further comprise and/or invoke a pupil tracking device, subsystem or process whereby a pupil location can be taken into account to dynamically adjust rendering of the perceptively adjusted image to accommodate a moving pupil location. For example, active pupil tracking can be implemented in two or three dimensions, and used as input in the image rendering processes described in further detail below for the purposes of improving image perception adjustments given a current pupil location. In some embodiments, image perception adjustments can be improved to accommodate a single pupil location, for example that of the viewer's dominant eye when considering visual acuity improvements. To do so, the active pupil location can be used to re-center a view zone produced by the light field display as the pupil location changes.
For instance, implementation of a light display as described herein may result in the definition of a spatially periodically recurring view zone within which an adjusted image can be successfully projected. As detailed further below, this recurring view zone can be manifested by a combination of contributions from each display pixel as it is governed through or by the light field shaping element array, whereby a primary view zone is manifested by pixel contributions generated via their nearest light field shaping element (i.e. those in optimal optical alignment therewith), whereas secondary or recurring adjacent view zones are manifested by these same rendered pixels when interfacing with secondary (less optically optimal) light field shaping elements. In embodiments invoking single pupil tracking or adjustment capabilities, optimization can be sought by computationally re-centering the primary view zone with this pupil location. However, when considering binocular (or multi-user) experiences, optimization of the primary view zone with an input location can result in a boundary of the primary (or secondary/recurring) view zone to overlap with a distinct pupil location (e.g. the user's other eye). Accordingly, in some of the herein described embodiments, a pupil tracking input can be used not only to ensure the dominant (or selected) eye is contained within a defined (primary) view zone, but that a distinct pupil location is also contained within a same or distinct view zone, for instance, so to avoid any view zone boundary overlap with any pupil location. As detailed further below, this may be adaptively implemented such that view zone boundaries are shifted or translated so to center, as much as possible, both or multiple pupil locations with corresponding view zones, or possibly sacrifice such centering of either or both relative pupil locations so to avoid or minimize zone boundary overlaps. This adaptation may be implemented as a function of binocular pupil tracking, or again accounting for a pre-set relative distance between a tracked pupil and its counterpart.
Furthermore, in some embodiments, view zone boundary optimization may not only allow for reduced zone boundary visual artefacts, but also allow for the definition of distinct view zone areas dedicated to the rendering and projection of alternate or distinct image perception adjustments prescribed for distinct pupil locations. For instance, view window boundary optimization and view window area segregation may allow for the implementation of binocular vision correction and/or autostereoscopic effects. These and other such considerations will be described in greater detail below.
With reference to
In the illustrated embodiment, the device 100 comprises a processing unit 110, a digital display 120, and internal memory 130. Display 120 can be an LCD screen, a monitor, a plasma display panel, an LED or OLED screen, or any other type of digital display defined by a set of pixels for rendering a pixelated image or other like media or information. Internal memory 130 can be any form of electronic storage, including a disk drive, optical drive, read-only memory, random-access memory, or flash memory, to name a few examples. For illustrative purposes, memory 130 has stored in it vision correction application 140, though various methods and techniques may be implemented to provide computer-readable code and instructions for execution by the processing unit in order to process pixel data for an image to be rendered in producing corrected pixel data amenable to producing a corrected image accommodating the user's reduced visual acuity (e.g. stored and executable image correction application, tool, utility or engine, etc.). Other components of the electronic device 100 may optionally include, but are not limited to, one or more rear and/or front-facing camera(s) 150, an accelerometer 160 and/or other device positioning/orientation devices capable of determining the tilt and/or orientation of electronic device 100, and the like.
For example, the electronic device 100, or related environment (e.g. within the context of a desktop workstation, vehicular console/dashboard, gaming or e-learning station, multimedia display room, etc.) may include further hardware, firmware and/or software components and/or modules to deliver complementary and/or cooperative features, functions and/or services. For example, in some embodiment, and as will be described in greater detail below, a pupil/eye tracking system may be integrally or cooperatively implemented to improve or enhance corrective image rending by tracking a location of the user's eye(s)/pupil(s) (e.g. both or one, e.g. dominant, eye(s)) and adjusting light field corrections accordingly. For instance, the device 100 may include, integrated therein or interfacing therewith, one or more eye/pupil tracking light sources, such as one or more infrared (IR) or near-IR (NIR) light source(s) to accommodate operation in limited ambient light conditions, leverage retinal retro-reflections, invoke corneal reflection, and/or other such considerations. For instance, different IR/NIR pupil tracking techniques may employ one or more (e.g. arrayed) directed or broad illumination light sources to stimulate retinal retro-reflection and/or corneal reflection in identifying a tracking a pupil location. Other techniques may employ ambient or IR/NIR light-based machine vision and facial recognition techniques to otherwise locate and track the user's eye(s)/pupil(s). To do so, one or more corresponding (e.g. visible, IR/NIR) cameras may be deployed to capture eye/pupil tracking signals that can be processed, using various image/sensor data processing techniques, to map a 3D location of the user's eye(s)/pupil(s). In the context of a mobile device, such as a mobile phone, such eye/pupil tracking hardware/software may be integral to the device, for instance, operating in concert with integrated components such as one or more front facing camera(s), onboard IR/NIR light source(s) and the like. In other user environments, such as in a vehicular environment, eye/pupil tracking hardware may be further distributed within the environment, such as dash, console, ceiling, windshield, mirror or similarly-mounted camera(s), light sources, etc.
With reference to
For the sake of illustration, the following embodiments will be described within the context of a light field shaping layer defined, at least in part, by a lenslet array comprising an array of microlenses (also interchangeably referred to herein as lenslets) that are each disposed at a distance from a corresponding subset of image rendering pixels in an underlying digital display. It will be appreciated that while a light field shaping layer may be manufactured and disposed as a digital screen overlay, other integrated concepts may also be considered, for example, where light field shaping elements are integrally formed or manufactured within a digital screen's integral components such as a textured or masked glass plate, beam-shaping light sources (e.g. directional light sources and/or backlit integrated optical grating array) or like component. Accordingly, each lenslet will predictively shape light emanating from these pixel subsets to at least partially govern light rays being projected toward the user by the display device. As noted above, other light field shaping layers may also be considered herein without departing from the general scope and nature of the present disclosure, whereby light field shaping will be understood by the person of ordinary skill in the art to reference measures by which light, that would otherwise emanate indiscriminately (i.e. isotropically) from each pixel group, is deliberately controlled to define predictable light rays that can be traced between more than one eye of the user(s) and the device's pixels through the shaping layer.
For greater clarity, a light field is generally defined as a vector function that describes the amount of light flowing in every direction through every point in space. In other words, anything that produces or reflects light has an associated light field. The embodiments described herein produce light fields from an object that are not “natural” vector functions one would expect to observe from that object. This gives it the ability to emulate the “natural” light fields of objects that do not physically exist, such as a virtual display located far behind the light field display, which will be referred to now as the ‘virtual image’. As noted in the examples below, in some embodiments, light field rendering may be adjusted to effectively generate more than one virtual image on virtual image planes that are set at a designated distance from an input user pupil location, for example, so to effectively push back, or move forward, perceived images relative to the display device in accommodating a user's or users' reduced visual acuity (e.g. minimum or maximum viewing distance). In yet other embodiments, light field rendering may rather or alternatively seek to map the input images on a retinal plane of the user(s), taking into account visual aberrations, so to adaptively adjust rendering of the input images on the display device to produce the mapped effect. Namely, where the unadjusted input images would otherwise typically come into focus in front of or behind the retinal plane (and/or be subject to other optical aberrations), this approach allows mapping of the intended images on the retinal plane and working therefrom to address designated optical aberrations accordingly. Using this approach, the device may further computationally interpret and compute virtual image distances tending toward infinity, for example, for extreme cases of presbyopia. This approach may also more readily allow, as will be appreciated by the below description, for adaptability to other visual aberrations that may not be as readily modeled using a virtual image and image plane implementation. In both of these examples, and like embodiments, the input images are digitally mapped to one or more adjusted image planes (e.g. virtual image planes or retinal planes) designated to provide the user(s) with a designated image perception adjustment that at least partially addresses designated visual aberrations. Naturally, while visual aberrations may be addressed using these approaches, other visual effects may also be implemented using similar techniques.
In one example, to apply this technology to vision correction, consider first the normal ability of the lens in an eye, as schematically illustrated in
As will be appreciated by the skilled artisan, a light field as seen in
Following with the example of a microlens array,
Accordingly, upon predictably aligning a particular microlens array with a pixel array, a designated “circle” of pixels will correspond with each microlens and be responsible for delivering light to the pupil through that lens.
As will be detailed further below, the separation between the microlens array and the pixel array as well as the pitch of the lenses can be selected as a function of various operating characteristics, such as the normal or average operating distance of the display, and/or normal or average operating ambient light levels.
Further, as producing a light field with angular resolution sufficient for accommodation correction over the full viewing ‘zone’ of a display would generally require an astronomically high pixel density, instead, a correct light field can be produced, in some embodiments, only at or around the location of the user's pupils. To do so, the light field display can be paired with pupil tracking technology to track a location of the user's or users' eyes/pupils relative to the display. The display can then compensate for eye locations and produce the correct virtual image, for example, in real time.
In some embodiments, the light field display can render dynamic images at over 30 frames per second on the hardware in a smartphone.
In some embodiments, the light field display can display a virtual image at optical infinity, meaning that any level of accommodation-based presbyopia (e.g. first order) can be corrected for.
In some further embodiments, the light field display can both push the image back or forward, thus allowing for selective image corrections for both hyperopia (far-sightedness) and myopia (nearsightedness).
In order to demonstrate a working light field solution, and in accordance with one embodiment, the following test was set up. A camera was equipped with a simple lens, to simulate the lens in a human eye and the aperture was set to simulate a normal pupil diameter. The lens was focused to 50 cm away and a phone was mounted 25 cm away. This would approximate a user whose minimal seeing distance is 50 cm and is attempting to use a phone at 25 cm.
With reading glasses, +2.0 diopters would be necessary for the vision correction. A scaled Snellen chart was displayed on the cellphone and a picture was taken, as shown in
Accordingly, a display device as described above and further exemplified below, can be configured to render a corrected image via the light field shaping layer that accommodates for the user's visual acuity. By adjusting the image correction in accordance with the user's actual predefined, set or selected visual acuity level, different users and visual acuity may be accommodated using a same device configuration. That is, in one example, by adjusting corrective image pixel data to dynamically adjust a virtual image distance below/above the display as rendered via the light field shaping layer, different visual acuity levels may be accommodated.
As will be appreciated by the skilled artisan, different image processing techniques may be considered, such as those introduced above and taught by Pamplona and/or Huang, for example, which may also influence other light field parameters to achieve appropriate image correction, virtual image resolution, brightness and the like.
With reference to
In some embodiments, as illustrated in
In yet some further or alternative embodiments, a pitch ratio between the microlens array and pixel array may be deliberately selected to further or alternatively alleviate periodic optical artifacts. For example, a perfectly matched pitch ratio (i.e. an exact integer number of display pixels per microlens) is most likely to induce periodic optical artifacts, whereas a pitch ratio mismatch can help reduce such occurrences. Accordingly, in some embodiments, the pitch ratio will be selected to define an irrational number, or at least, an irregular ratio, so to minimize periodic optical artifacts. For instance, a structural periodicity can be defined so to reduce the number of periodic occurrences within the dimensions of the display screen at hand, e.g. ideally selected so to define a structural period that is greater than the size of the display screen being used.
In yet other examples as will be described in further detail below, the dimension, configuration and orientation of the arrayed light field shaping elements may be selected so to produce different light field view windows, for example, to accommodate binocular vision correction, autostereoscopic and/or like effects. For example, while roughly circular microlenses may be considered in a regular hexagonal array, as illustrated and described above, elongated light field shaping elements, such as elongated elliptical or like geometries may be considered in a squared, staggered, hexagonal, nestled or other substantially tessellated geometries. For instance, in some of the examples noted below with reference to
While this example is provided within the context of a microlens array, similar structural design considerations may be applied within the context of a parallax barrier, diffractive barrier or combination thereof.
With reference to
As illustrated in
The pupil location(s) 1308, in one embodiment, is(are) the three-dimensional coordinates of at least one of the user's pupils' center with respect to a given reference frame, for example a point on the device or display. Pupil location(s) 1308 may be derived from any eye/pupil tracking method known in the art. In some embodiments, the pupil location(s) 1308 may be determined prior to any new iteration of the rendering algorithm, or in other cases, at a lower framerate. In some embodiments, only the pupil location(s) of a single user's eye may be determined, for example the user's dominant eye (i.e. the one that is primarily relied upon by the user). In some embodiments, this position, and particularly the pupil distance to the screen, may otherwise or additionally be rather approximated or adjusted based on other contextual or environmental parameters, such as an average or preset user distance to the screen (e.g. typical reading distance for a given user or group of users; stored, set or adjustable driver distance in a vehicular environment; etc.). As will be detailed further below, in some embodiments where a single pupil location is considered, the corrected image rendering may be adapted to center an adapted view zone around this location. In other embodiments, however, this location can be shifted relative to a view zone boundary by adjusting certain parameters such that the view zone is no longer centered on this pupil location, but rather shifted so to better accommodate the user's second pupil location, which second location can be actively tracked, or estimated from previous data, inputs, or estimates. A desired shift, in some examples, may be accounted for as input in computing appropriate pixel allocations to render a corrected image, or again applied once a particular pixelated pattern/texture has been resolved. For simplicity, the following will consider a single pupil location without adaptive view zone shifting, noting that the generation of complementary views to be rendered within a same view zone may be computed in a similar fashion based on distinct view image inputs and/or adaptations, and corresponding/relative pupil locations.
In the illustrated embodiment, the minimum reading distance 1310 is defined as the minimal focus distance for reading that the user's or users' eye(s) may be able to accommodate (i.e. able to view without discomfort). In some embodiments, different values of the minimum reading distance 1310 associated with different users may be entered, for example, as can other adaptive vision correction parameters be considered depending on the application at hand and vision correction being addressed.
With added reference to
An exemplary ray-tracing methodology is described in steps 1110 to 1128 of
As illustrated in
The method then finds, in step 1114, the coordinates of the center 1416 of the LFSL optical element closest to intersection point 1411. This step may be computationally intensive and will be discussed in more depth below. Once the position of the center 1416 of the optical element is known, in step 1116, a normalized unit ray vector is generated from drawing and normalizing a vector 1423 drawn from center position 1416 to pixel 1409. This unit ray vector generally approximates the direction of the light field emanating from pixel 1409 through this particular light field element, for instance, when considering a parallax barrier aperture or lenslet array (i.e. where the path of light travelling through the center of a given lenslet is not deviated by this lenslet). Further computation may be required when addressing more complex light shaping elements, as will be appreciated by the skilled artisan. The direction of this ray vector will be used to find the portion of image 1306, and thus the associated color, represented by pixel 1409. But first, in step 1118, this ray vector is projected backwards to the plane of pupil 1415, and then in step 1120, the method verifies that the projected ray vector 1425 is still within pupil 1415 (i.e. that the user can still “see” it). Once the intersection position, for example location 1431 in
If this deviation is deemed to be too large (i.e. light emanating from pixel 1409 channeled through optical element 1416 is not perceived by pupil 1415), then in step 1122, the method flags pixel 1409 as unnecessary and to simply be turned off or render a black color. Otherwise, as shown in
In some embodiments, method 1100 is modified so that at step 1120, instead of having a binary choice between the ray vector hitting the pupil or not, one or more smooth interpolation function (i.e. linear interpolation, Hermite interpolation or similar) are used to quantify how far or how close the intersection point 1431 is to the pupil center 1417 by outputting a corresponding continuous value between 1 or 0. For example, the assigned value is equal to 1 substantially close to pupil center 1417 and gradually change to 0 as the intersection point 1431 substantially approaches the pupil edges or beyond. In this case, the branch containing step 1122 is ignored and step 1220 continues to step 1124. At step 1126, the pixel color value assigned to pixel 1409 is chosen to be somewhere between the full color value of the portion of image 1306 at intersection point 1423 or black, depending on the value of the interpolation function used at step 1120 (1 or 0).
In yet other embodiments, pixels found to illuminate a designated area around the pupil may still be rendered, for example, to produce a buffer zone to accommodate small movements in pupil location, for example, or again, to address potential inaccuracies, misalignments or to create a better user experience.
In some embodiments, steps 1118, 1120 and 1122 may be avoided completely, the method instead going directly from step 1116 to step 1124. In such an exemplary embodiment, no check is made that the ray vector hits the pupil or not, but instead the method assumes that it always does.
Once the output colors of all pixels have been determined, these are finally rendered in step 1130 by pixel display 1401 to be viewed by the user(s), therefore presenting a light field corrected image for each eye. In the case of a single static image, the method may stop here. However, new input variables may be entered and the image may be refreshed at any desired frequency, for example because the user's or users' pupils move as a function of time and/or because instead of a single image a series of images are displayed at a given framerate.
With reference to
As noted above, monocular or binocular view zone optimization may also be applied within the context of this particular implementation by taking into account a desired relative pupil location within a rendered view zone.
Once parameters 1102 and variables 1104 have been set, this second exemplary ray-tracing methodology proceeds from steps 1910 to 1936, at the end of which the output color of each pixel of the pixel display is known so as to virtually reproduce the light field emanating from an image perceived to be positioned at the correct or adjusted image distance, in one example, so to allow the user(s) to properly focus on this adjusted image (i.e. having a focused image projected on the user's retina) despite a quantified visual aberration. In
Referencing once more
From there, in step 1914, the coordinates of the optical element center 1416 closest to intersection point 1411 are determined. This step may be computationally intensive and will be discussed in more depth below. As shown in
While in one embodiment the method 1900 can be applied to the projection of an adjusted image to more than one eye, the method 1900 will be described with reference to a single adjusted image and eye for clarity. Now referring to
The skilled artisan will note that any light ray originating from optical element center 1416, no matter its orientation, will also be focused onto focus point 2008, to a first approximation. Therefore, the location on retina plane (2012) onto which light entering the pupil at intersection point 1431 will converge may be approximated by drawing a straight line between intersection point 1431 where ray vector 1425 hits the pupil 1415 and focus point 2008 on focal plane 2006. The intersection of this line with retina plane 2010 (retina image point 2012) is thus the location on the user's retina corresponding to the image portion that will be reproduced by corresponding pixel 1409 as perceived by the user. Therefore, by comparing the relative position of retina point 2012 with the overall position of the projected image on the retina plane 2010, the relevant adjusted image portion associated with pixel 1409 may be computed.
To do so, at step 1927, the corresponding projected image center position on retina plane 2010 is calculated. Vector 2016 is generated originating from the center position of display 1401 (display center position 2018) and passing through pupil center 1417. Vector 2016 is projected beyond the pupil plane onto retina plane 2010, wherein the associated intersection point gives the location of the corresponding retina image center 2020 on retina plane 2010. The skilled technician will understand that step 1927 could be performed at any moment prior to step 1929, once the relative pupil center location 1417 is known in input variables step 1904. Once image center 2020 is known, one can then find the corresponding image portion of the selected pixel/subpixel at step 1929 by calculating the x/y coordinates of retina image point 2012 relative to retina image center 2020 on the retina, scaled to the x/y retina image size 2031.
This retina image size 2031 may be computed by calculating the magnification of an individual pixel on retina plane 2010, for example, which may be approximately equal to the x or y dimension of an individual pixel multiplied by the eye depth 1314 and divided by the absolute value of the distance to the eye (i.e. the magnification of pixel image size from the eye lens). Similarly, for comparison purposes, the input image is also scaled by the image x/y dimensions to produce a corresponding scaled input image 2064. Both the scaled input image and scaled retina image should have a width and height between −0.5 to 0.5 units, enabling a direct comparison between a point on the scaled retina image 2010 and the corresponding scaled input image 2064, as shown in
From there, the image portion position 2041 relative to retina image center position 2043 in the scaled coordinates (scaled input image 2064) corresponds to the inverse (because the image on the retina is inverted) scaled coordinates of retina image point 2012 with respect to retina image center 2020. The associated color with image portion position 2041 is therefrom extracted and associated with pixel 1409.
In some embodiments, method 1900 may be modified so that at step 1920, instead of having a binary choice between the ray vector hitting the pupil or not, one or more smooth interpolation function (i.e. linear interpolation, Hermite interpolation or similar) are used to quantify how far or how close the intersection point 1431 is to the pupil center 1417 by outputting a corresponding continuous value between 1 or 0. For example, the assigned value is equal to 1 substantially close to pupil center 1417 and gradually change to 0 as the intersection point 1431 substantially approaches the pupil edges or beyond. In this case, the branch containing step 1122 is ignored and step 1920 continues to step 1124. At step 1931, the pixel color value assigned to pixel 1409 is chosen to be somewhere between the full color value of the portion of image 1306 at intersection point 1423 or black, depending on the value of the interpolation function used at step 1920 (1 or 0).
In yet other embodiments, pixels found to illuminate a designated area around the pupil may still be rendered, for example, to produce a buffer zone to accommodate small movements in pupil location, for example, or again, to address potential inaccuracies or misalignments.
Once the output colors of all pixels in the display have been determined (check at step 1934 is true), these are finally rendered in step 1936 by pixel display 1401 to be viewed by the user, therefore presenting a light field corrected image. In the case of a single static image, the method may stop here. However, new input variables may be entered and the image may be refreshed at any desired frequency, for example because the user's pupil moves as a function of time and/or because instead of a single image a series of images are displayed at a given framerate.
As will be appreciated by the skilled artisan, selection of the adjusted image plane onto which to map the input image in order to adjust a user perception of this input image allows for different ray tracing approaches to solving a similar challenge, that is of creating an adjusted image using the light field display that can provide an adjusted user perception, such as addressing a user's reduce visual acuity. While mapping the input image to a virtual image plane set at a designated minimum (or maximum) comfortable viewing distance can provide one solution, the alternate solution may allow accommodation of different or possibly more extreme visual aberrations. For example, where a virtual image is ideally pushed to infinity (or effectively so), computation of an infinite distance becomes problematic. However, by designating the adjusted image plane as the retinal plane, the illustrative process of
While the computations involved in the above described ray-tracing algorithms (steps 1110 to 1128 of
With reference to
With reference to
For hexagonal geometries, as illustrated in
To solve this problem, the array of hexagonal tiles 1601 may be superimposed on or by a second array of staggered rectangular tiles 1705, in such a way as to make an “inverted house” diagram within each rectangle, as clearly illustrated in
Furthermore, while this particular example encompasses the definition of linearly defined tile region boundaries, other boundary types may also be considered provided they are amenable to the definition of one or more conditional statements, as illustrated below, that can be used to output a corresponding set of binary or Boolean values that distinctly identify a location of a given point within one or another of these regions, for instance, without invoking, or by limiting, processing demands common to branching or looping decision logics/trees/statements/etc.
Following with hexagonal example, to locate the associated hexagon tile center 1615 closest to the intersection point 1411, in step 1517, the method first computes the 2D position of the bottom left corner 1707 of the associated (normalized) rectangular tile element 1709 containing intersection point 1411, as shown in
{right arrow over (t)}=(floor(uvy), 0)
{right arrow over (C)}corner=({right arrow over (uv)}+{right arrow over (t)})−{right arrow over (t)}
where {right arrow over (uv)} is the position vector of intersection point 1411 in the common frame of reference of the hexagonal and staggered rectangular tile arrays, and the floor ( ) function returns the greatest integer less than or equal to each of the xy coordinates of {right arrow over (uv)}.
Once the position of lower left corner 1707, indicated by vector {right arrow over (C)}corner 1701, of the associated rectangular element 1814 containing the intersection point 1411 is known, three regions 1804, 1806 and 1807 within this rectangular element 1814 may be distinguished, as shown in
Continuing with the illustrated example, in step 1519, the coordinates within associated rectangular tile 1814 are again rescaled, as shown on the axis of
dx=2*(uvx−Ccorner
dy=3*(uvy−Ccorner
Thus, the possible x and y values of the position of intersection point 1411 within associated rectangular tile 1814 are now contained within −1<x<1 and 0<y<3. This will make the next step easier to compute.
To efficiently find the region encompassing a given intersection point in these rescaled coordinates, the fact that, within the rectangular element 1814, each region is separated by a diagonal line is used. For example, this is illustrated in
To finally obtain the relative coordinates of the hexagonal center associated with the identified region, in step 1523, the set of converted Boolean values may be used as an input to a single floating point vectorial function operable to map each set of these values to a set of xy coordinates of the associated element center. For example, in the described embodiment and as shown in
{right arrow over (r)}=(rx,ry)=(0.5+0.5*(caseR−caseL), ⅔−(caseR−caseL))
thus, the inputs of (1.0, 0.0), (0.0, 1.0) or (0.0, 0.0) map to the positions (0.0, −⅓), (0.5, ⅔), and (1.0, −⅓), respectively, which corresponds to the shown hexagonal centers 1863, 1865 and 1867 shown in
Now back to
The skilled artisan will note that modifications to the above-described method may also be used. For example, the staggered grid shown in
In yet other embodiments, wherein a rectangular and/or square microlens array is used instead of a nestled (hexagonal) array, a slightly different method may be used to identify the associated LFSL element (microlens) center (step 1114). Herein, the microlens array is represented by an array of rectangular and/or square tiles. The method, as previously described, goes through step 1515, where the x and y coordinates are rescaled (normalized) with respect to a microlens x and y dimension (henceforth giving each rectangular and/or square tile a width and height of 1 unit). However, at step 1517, the floor( ) function is used directly on each x and y coordinates of {right arrow over (uv)} (the position vector of intersection point 1411) to find the coordinates of the bottom left corner associated with the corresponding square/rectangular tile. Therefrom, the relative coordinates of the tile center from the bottom left corner are added directly to obtain the final scaled position vector:
{right arrow over (r)}=(rx,ry)=(floor(uvx)+0.5, floor(uvy)+0.5)
Once this vector is known, the method goes directly to step 1525 where the coordinates are scaled back into absolute units (i.e. mm) and rotated back to the original frame of reference with respect to the display to obtain the 3D positions (in mm) of the optical layer element's center with respect to the display's frame of reference, which is then fed into step 1116.
The light field rendering methods described above (from
In
To further illustrate embodiments making use of subpixel rendering, with reference to
In the example shown in
In the example shown in
In order to implement subpixel rendering in the context of light field image correction, in some embodiments, ray tracing calculations must be executed in respect of each subpixel, as opposed to in respect of each pixel as a whole, based on a location (x,y coordinates on the screen) of each subpixel. Beyond providing for greater rendering accuracy and sharpness, subpixel control and ray tracing computations may accommodate different subpixel configurations, for example, where subpixel mixing or overlap is invoked to increase a perceived resolution of a high-resolution screen and/or where non- uniform subpixel arrangements are provided or relied upon in different digital display technologies.
In some embodiments, however, in order to avoid or reduce a computation load increase imparted by the distinct consideration of each subpixel, some computation efficiencies may be leveraged by taking into account the regular subpixel distribution from pixel to pixel, or in the context of subpixel sharing and/or overlap, for certain pixel groups, lines, columns, etc. With reference to
While this example contemplates a linear (horizontal) subpixel distribution, other 2D distributions may also be considered without departing from the general scope and nature of the present disclosure. For example, for a given digital display screen and pixel and subpixel distribution, different subpixel mappings can be determined to define respective pixel subcoordinate systems that, when applied to standard pixel-centric ray tracing and image correction algorithms, can allow for subpixel processing and increase image correction resolution and sharpness without undue processing load increases.
In some embodiments, additional efficiencies may be leveraged on the GPU by storing the image data, for example image 1306, in the GPU's texture memory. Texture memory is cached on chip and in some situations is operable to provide higher effective bandwidth by reducing memory requests to off-chip DRAM. Specifically, texture caches are designed for graphics applications where memory access patterns exhibit a great deal of spatial locality, which is the case of the steps 1110-1126 of method 1100. For example, in method 1100, image 1306 may be stored inside the texture memory of the GPU, which then greatly improves the retrieval speed during step 1126 where the color channel associated with the portion of image 1306 at intersection point 1423 is determined.
As introduced above, in some embodiments, light field view zone optimization may be implemented so to better accommodate adjusted image perception by both of a viewer's eyes/pupils, for example. In order to understand how the abovementioned methods and systems can be extended to provide image adjustments for more than one eye, it is important to first understand that the light fields produced by such displays are not completely rendered light fields. Rather, there is a relatively small area in 3D space where a “meaningful” light field exists (a view zone), while the remaining 3D space may not comprise a meaningful image originating from the display. The region where a meaningful image exists may be translated by adjusting display parameters and rendering a different texture on the display, i.e. adjusting pixel selection and allocation to accommodate view zone translation. When a light field display is used in combination with eye or pupil tracking, it is possible to ensure that a user's eye always falls within a view zone such that the user may not notice the presence of the space where the light field is meaningless. This also promotes locating the view zone comfortably away from zone boundaries that, naturally, could result in a pupil being located between view zones, and thus potentially being subject to visual artefacts accordingly.
With reference to
As the light from other pixels of the digital display 920 will reach different microlenses 930 of the microlens array 900 and then be refracted, the beams produced may be combined to form an image for the user at the pupil location. It is also depicted that the rays are not able to form an image in certain areas, for example, close to the display. That is what is referred to as an area where the lightfield is meaningless.
The concept of view zones, and in particular view zones that are spatially periodically and recurrently generated from a periodic array of light field shaping elements, as shown in
The desired position of a particular view zone is considered during light field rendering. For instance, pixels are selectively illuminated upon determining where the cones emerging from each lenslet will overlap. While translation of the view zone is possible, its size is typically proportional to the distance of the view zone from the display. As a result, if a user's eye is too close to the display, the view zone cross-sectional area may be smaller than that of a user's pupil, resulting in cross-talk as the user experiences multiple view zones simultaneously. On the other hand, at too great a distance from the display, resolution may be relatively poor, as the space between collimated beams from adjacent pixels is larger, and image quality may suffer. Additionally, as many pixels in
Due to the distance between, for instance, both eyes of a single user, the eyes of the user may lie in different view zones, and may thus receive slightly different images and/or image qualities. Furthermore, if eyes are at different distances from the display, such as if the user's face was turned from the display, or if different visual corrections are required for each eye, there may arise a poor viewing experience, as the user's brain may attempt to alternate between the different images presented, or blur them together. It is preferable, therefore, to present each eye with an appropriately uniquely adjusted image that will not result in undesirable interpretation when processing images from both eyes. Such a system could also provide depth cues to a user for stereoscopic 3D views.
While it is possible for both pupils of a user to lie completely within respective view zones, as illustrated in
In accordance with another aspect of this disclosure, view zone geometry can be tuned, for instance through the design of alternate light field shaping element geometries, to improve adjusted image properties for more than one eye.
Other embodiments include view zone geometries that are sufficiently small, for instance to maintain a relatively high resolution, that two pupils lie in non-adjacent view zones. Similar to
In accordance with various embodiments, a view zone geometry, and/or a configuration of view zones, may at least in part be defined by corresponding geometry and/or configuration of a light field shaping layer. For instance, a light field shaping layer comprising a hexagonal array of light field shaping elements (e.g. a hexagonal array of microlenses) may, by virtue of their configuration, provide a hexagonal array of spatially periodically repeating view zones. Further, the configuration of such an array of light field shaping elements, in accordance with various embodiments, may provide a corresponding geometry to each view zone. That is, a hexagonal array of light field shaping elements may provide an array of respective view zones that are respectively hexagonal. Similarly, a view zone comprising a stretched or elongated geometry may be provided by, for instance, one or a combination of an array of stretched or elongated light field shaping elements (e.g. an array of microlenses wherein each microlens comprises a stretched or elongated hexagonal geometry), or a stretched array of light field shaping elements (e.g. a hexagonal array of microlenses wherein the density of microlenses is greater in one dimension than another).
In some embodiments, view zones may be algorithmically translated to accommodate for varying pupil-to-display distances, as illustrated in
While the present disclosure describes various exemplary embodiments, the disclosure is not so limited. To the contrary, the disclosure is intended to cover various modifications and equivalent arrangements included within the general scope of the present disclosure.
This application is the U.S. National Phase Application under 35 U.S.C. § 371 of International Application No. PCT/IB2020/057888, filed on Aug. 22, 2020, which claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/891,845, filed on Aug. 26, 2019, the entire disclosure of each of which is hereby incorporated by reference.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/IB2020/057888 | 8/22/2020 | WO |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2021/038422 | 3/4/2021 | WO | A |
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