Redirected walking
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Redirected walking[1] is a virtual reality locomotion technique that enables users to explore a virtual world that is considerably larger than the tracked working space.[2] With this approach the user is redirected through manipulations applied to the displayed scene, causing users to unknowingly compensate for scene motion by repositioning and/or reorienting themselves.[3]
References
[edit]- ^ Razzaque, S. Kohn, Z., Whitton, M. (2001) Redirected Walking. Proceedings of Eurographics 2001, pp. 289-294. September 2001, Manchester, UK
- ^ Nilsson, N. C., Peck, T., Bruder, G., Hodgson, E., Serafin, S., Whitton, M., Steinicke, F., & Rosenberg, E. S. (2018). 15 years of research on redirected walking in immersive virtual environments. IEEE computer graphics and applications, 38(2), 44-56
- ^ Zhang, Sarah (August 31, 2015). "You Can't Walk in a Straight Line—And That's Great for VR". Wired. Retrieved July 31, 2016.
- Steinicke F, Bruder G, Jerald J, Frenz H, Lappe M (2010). "Estimation of Detection Thresholds for Redirected Walking Techniques" (PDF). IEEE Trans Vis Comput Graph. 16 (1): 17–27. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.182.5692. doi:10.1109/TVCG.2009.62. PMID 19910658. S2CID 1867356.