Bernd Frohlich's research while affiliated with Bauhaus-Universität Weimar and other places
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Publications (3)
Unlike the famous prehistoric European art found protected deep in a handful of limestone caves, the rarely seen open-air rock carvings located in Valcamonica in Northern Italy (known as Pitoti), have been left exposed to the elements for over 7000 years. The three year European project 3D-PITOTI (http://www.3d-pitoti.eu/) began in March, 2013 with...
Our vision is that regardless of future variations in the interior of airplane cabins, we can utilize ever-advancing state-of-the-art virtual and mixed reality technologies with the latest research in neuroscience and psychology to achieve high levels of comfort for passengers. Current surveys on passenger's experience during air travel reveal that...
Citations
... To reduce fatigue and control the study time at about one hour, we set the speed of movement to 4 m/s with constant acceleration, which is greater than typical walking speed (i.e., 1.4m/s). Given prior research indicating that using high-speed steering (e.g., 13 m/s in Weißker et al. [89]) to learn spatial navigation in a virtual environment has no negative effects on spatial updating accuracy, we believe our speed setting would be slow enough to assess spatial learning. Also, participants in the pilot study did not report motion sickness when navigating the virtual urban environment at the 4 m/s speed. ...
... VR provides a more efficient design review process and helps stakeholders identifying issues easier (Davila Delgado et al., 2020). VR is also able to assist architectural designers for space assessment ranging from spatial relationship, occupation comfort, visual and audio comfort (Berg and Vance, 2017;D'Cruz et al., 2014;Echevarria Sanchez et al., 2017;Liu and Kang, 2018;Sun et al., 2020). VR also can help non-designer to examine architectural design with ease (Serpa and Eloy, 2020). ...