How can virtual reality (VR) be experienced haptically, i.e., through the sense of touch? This is one of the fundamental questions that modern VR research is investigating.
Combining advances in display technologies, holographic imaging, and artificial intelligence, engineers at Stanford say they have produced a leap forward for augmented reality.
The aeronautics industry is without question a dynamic sector of activity where progress takes place at breakneck pace and where the players in the field have to deal with remarkable technological advances that follow each other at increasingly shorter intervals.
Setting the stage for a new era of immersive displays, researchers are one step closer to mixing the real and virtual worlds in an ordinary pair of eyeglasses using high-definition 3D holographic images, according to a study led by Princeton University researchers.
Researchers have developed a virtual reality application where a range of 3D modelling tools can be opened and controlled using just the movement of a user’s hand.
Immersal's Visual Positioning System (VPS) revolutionizes robotics and autonomous mobility, enhancing precision and fostering innovations in smart urban development and transportation through its partnership with Unikie.
Augmented Reality (AR) and Visual Positioning Systems (VPS) are transforming live entertainment by blending the physical and digital realms to offer immersive, interactive, and personalized experiences across sports, music, and leisure activities.
Since its inception augmented and virtual reality has vastly evolved, in part thanks to advancements like Immersal's innovation in visual positioning to enhance AR by outpacing GPS limitations.
In this episode, we delve into the cognitive strategies employed by researchers at EPFL to augment the human body with an additional robotic arm and learn about the profound impact of cognitive enhancements on the integration of advanced robotic limbs
EPFL scientists show that breathing may be used to control a wearable extra robotic arm in healthy individuals, without hindering control of other parts of the body.
A team from the Embedded Intelligence research department at DFKI is working with doctors at Klinikum Saarbrücken to to develop new methods for AR-based assistance systems to support operations on the pancreas.
Here, we explain the movement called “retailtech,” which develops and uses the latest information technologies and has become widely used in the retail industry.