Acoustical Awareness in MOUT

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abstract

Mixed Reality (MR), and its predecessor Virtual Reality (VR), has been primarily viewed as a visual science, with much less attention given to the other senses, despite clear evidence of their importance, especially audio. In fact, in military operation in urban environments, audio is often a more primary sense than vision, providing a soldier with an early warning system that needs to be honed and trained. Our research program, in contrast, treats the auditory sense as an equal to the visual. The consequences are MR experiences that have much greater impact than those in which audio is just an after thought. However, given the depth and breadth of graphics research, we are compelled to learn from this mature area. Thus, we are constantly striving to find results from graphics research that have useful analogies in the audio domain. Lessons learned from these analogies, especially as concern people’s perception and expectations, are the focus of this paper.

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publications

  • D. E. Hughes, J. Thropp, J. Holmquist and J. M. Moshell, "Spatial Perception and Expectation: Factors in Acoustical Awareness for MOUT Training," Proceedings of Army Science Conference (ASC) 2004, Orlando, FL, November 29-December 2, 2004.
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