» Articles » PMID: 35167470

The Effect of Context Switching, Focal Switching Distance, Binocular and Monocular Viewing, and Transient Focal Blur on Human Performance in Optical See-Through Augmented Reality

Overview
Date 2022 Feb 15
PMID 35167470
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

In optical see-through augmented reality (AR), information is often distributed between real and virtual contexts, and often appears at different distances from the user. To integrate information, users must repeatedly switch context and change focal distance. If the user's task is conducted under time pressure, they may attempt to integrate information while their eye is still changing focal distance, a phenomenon we term transient focal blur. Previously, Gabbard, Mehra, and Swan (2018) examined these issues, using a text-based visual search task on a one-eye optical see-through AR display. This paper reports an experiment that partially replicates and extends this task on a custom-built AR Haploscope. The experiment examined the effects of context switching, focal switching distance, binocular and monocular viewing, and transient focal blur on task performance and eye fatigue. Context switching increased eye fatigue but did not decrease performance. Increasing focal switching distance increased eye fatigue and decreased performance. Monocular viewing also increased eye fatigue and decreased performance. The transient focal blur effect resulted in additional performance decrements, and is an addition to knowledge about AR user interface design issues.

Citing Articles

The Effect of Ambient Illumination and Text Color on Visual Fatigue under Negative Polarity.

Fan Q, Xie J, Dong Z, Wang Y Sensors (Basel). 2024; 24(11).

PMID: 38894307 PMC: 11175232. DOI: 10.3390/s24113516.


Observed rates of surgical instrument errors point to visualization tasks as being a critically vulnerable point in sterile processing and a significant cause of lost chargeable OR minutes.

Nichol P, Saari M, Navas N, Aguilar D, Bliesner R, Brunner P BMC Surg. 2024; 24(1):110.

PMID: 38622597 PMC: 11017563. DOI: 10.1186/s12893-024-02407-1.


The effect of visual rivalry in peripheral head-mounted displays on mobility.

Han S, Kim S, Jung J Sci Rep. 2023; 13(1):20199.

PMID: 37980436 PMC: 10657352. DOI: 10.1038/s41598-023-47427-8.