| 日時(Date) |
2025年12月09日 (火) / Dec. 9th, 2025 (Tue.) 4限 (15:10--16:10) / 4th period (15:10--16:10) |
|---|---|
| 場所(Location) | L3 |
| 司会(Chair) | Isidro sensei |
| 講演者(Presenter) | Alexander Plopski (Assistant Professor, Institute of Visual Computing, Graz University of Technology) |
| 題目(Title) | Gaze-Aware Augmented Reality Interfaces |
| 概要(Abstract) | Augmented Reality (AR) changes how we interact and perceive our surroundings by embedding computer-generated content into them. In particular, Optical See-Through Head-Mounted Displays (OST-HMD) that display information in-situ aligned with the real world can provide important information in real-time, directly in the user's view of the world. Despite their potential, these devices still suffer from several issues that must be overcome before they can become more widely adopted. These problems span a variety of domains, such as geometrical accuracy, perceptual issues, context-sensitiveness, interaction, and privacy. In this talk, I will show how building on the old proverb "the eyes are a window to one's soul", we applied eye tracking and knowledge about the eye's anatomy to develop novel displays and user interfaces that present information more intuitively and adapt to the user's needs. |
| 講演言語(Language) | 英語/English |
| 講演者紹介(Introduction of Lecturer) | Alexander Plopski is an Assistant Professor at the Institute of Visual Computing at TU Graz, Austria, where he leads the Advanced Mixed Reality Interfaces Lab. He completed his MSc in Informatics at TU Munich, Germany, in 2012 and his PhD in Information Science at the University of Osaka, Japan, in 2016. He was an Assistant Professor at the Interactive Media Design Laboratory at the Nara Institute of Science and Technology (NAIST), Japan until 2019. During that time he was also a visiting researcher at the Johns Hopkins University in 2017 and the Carnegie Mellon University in 2018. From 2019 till 2022, he was a PostDoctoral Fellow at the HCI Group at the University of Otago, New Zealand, before joining TU Graz in May 2022. His scientific areas of interest include eye tracking, head-mounted displays, and extended reality. |