Publication | Open Access
Managing level of detail through peripheral degradation
83
Citations
18
References
1997
Year
Software MaintenanceEngineeringCognitionAttentionSocial SciencesEarly VisionPeripheral Lod DegradationSoftware AgingData RecoveryPeripheral DegradationVisual Search PerformanceCognitive ScienceOphthalmologyPerceptual User InterfaceVision ResearchVisual ProcessingVisual FunctionEye TrackingHuman-computer InteractionSpatial Detail
Two user studies were performed to evaluate the effect of level-of-detail (LOD) degradation in the periphery of head-mounted displays on visual search performance. In the first study, spatial detail was degraded by reducing resolution. In the second study, detail was degraded in the color domain by using grayscale in the periphery. In each study, 10 subjects were given a complex search task that required users to indicate whether or not a target object was present among distracters. Subjects used several different displays varying in the amount of detail presented. Frame rate, object location, subject input method, and order of display use were all controlled. The primary dependent measures were search time on correctly performed trials and the percentage of all trials correctly performed. Results indicated that peripheral LOD degradation can be used to reduce color or spatial visual complexity by almost half in some search tasks with out significantly reducing performance.
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