Refine
H-BRS Bibliography
- yes (1119) (remove)
Departments, institutes and facilities
- Fachbereich Informatik (606)
- Fachbereich Ingenieurwissenschaften und Kommunikation (235)
- Institut für Technik, Ressourcenschonung und Energieeffizienz (TREE) (216)
- Institute of Visual Computing (IVC) (210)
- Fachbereich Wirtschaftswissenschaften (148)
- Institut für Verbraucherinformatik (IVI) (86)
- Institut für Cyber Security & Privacy (ICSP) (81)
- Fachbereich Angewandte Naturwissenschaften (76)
- Internationales Zentrum für Nachhaltige Entwicklung (IZNE) (54)
- Fachbereich Sozialpolitik und Soziale Sicherung (39)
Document Type
- Conference Object (1119) (remove)
Year of publication
Keywords
- FPGA (11)
- Virtual Reality (9)
- Machine Learning (8)
- Robotics (7)
- Usable Security (7)
- User Experience (6)
- Augmented Reality (5)
- CUDA (5)
- Education (5)
- Sustainability (5)
Most VE-frameworks try to support many different input and output devices. They do not concentrate so much on the rendering because this is tradi- tionally done by graphics workstation. In this short paper we present a modern VE framework that has a small kernel and is able to use different renderers. This includes sound renderers, physics renderers and software based graphics renderers. While our VE framework, named basho is still under development we have an alpha version running under Linux and MacOS X.
In verteilten und offenen Systemen wollen Kommunikationspartner beim Electronic Commerce Dokumente vertraulich, integer und rechtsverbindlich sowie zuordnungsbar authentisch und nachweisbar senden und empfangen. Für die an der Kommunikation beteiligten Kommunikationspartner muß dazu nachvollziehbar sein, wer wann mit wem welche Dokumente ausgetauscht hat. Zur Erreichung des Sachziels 'Vertraulichkeit' werden Dokumente bei der Speicherung auf einem Server und bei der Übertragung (über lokale Netzte, Intranets, Extranets und im Internet) vom Endanwender verschlüsselt. Dazu müssen die benutzten Schlüssel gegen unberechtigte Kenntnisnahme geschützt werden. Gleichzeitig muß auch die Verfügbarkeit der Schlüssel sichergestellt werden: Verschlüsselte Dokumente können nämlich nur dann wieder benutzbar gemacht werden, wenn sie bei berechtigtem Bedarf wieder entschlüsselt werden können. Im Unternehmen ist es deshalb erforderlich, Verfahren einzuführen, die die Verfügbarkeit gespeicherter Dokumente sicherstellen - auch wenn der originäre Inhaber dieser Dokumente nicht verfügbar ist (Reise, Urlaub, Krankheit, Ausscheiden). Schlüssel-Archive - sog. Enterprise Key Recovery Server - bieten die Möglichkeit, verschlüsselt gespeicherte Konzelationsschlüssel Berechtigten wieder zu Verfügung zu stellen. Damit können verschlüsselt gespeicherte Dokumente gespeichert werden. Enterprise Key Recovery Server werden im Rahmen des Projekts SECFORS - Secure Electronic Commerce an der Fachhochschule Rhein-Sieg zusammen mit Studierenden installiert und unter einer Reihe von Aspekten im Rahmen des vom Bundeswirtschaftsministerium geförderten Kompetenzzentrums Electronic Commerce Bonn Rhein-Sieg (KompEC) evaluiert; dazu werden Anforderungen an vertrauenswürdige Enterprise Key Recovery Server formuliert. Der Einsatz von Enterprise Key Recovery Servern ist in den USA Stand der Technik; in deutschen Unternehmen wird der Bedarf insbesondere deswegen differenziert gesehen, weil eine Verschlüsselung gespeicherter und übertragener Daten noch nicht flächendeckend durchgeführt wird.
The study of locomotion in virtual environments is a diverse and rewarding research area. Yet, creating effective and intuitive locomotion techniques is challenging, especially when users cannot move around freely. While using handheld input devices for navigation may often be good enough, it does not match our natural experience of motion in the real world. Frequently, there are strong arguments for supporting body-centered self-motion cues as they may improve orientation and spatial judgments, and reduce motion sickness. Yet, how these cues can be introduced while the user is not moving around physically is not well understood. Actuated solutions such as motion platforms can be an option, but they are expensive and difficult to maintain. Alternatively, within this article we focus on the effect of upper-body tilt while users are seated, as previous work has indicated positive effects on self-motion perception. We report on two studies that investigated the effects of static and dynamic upper body leaning on perceived distances traveled and self-motion perception (vection). Static leaning (i.e., keeping a constant forward torso inclination) had a positive effect on self-motion, while dynamic torso leaning showed mixed results. We discuss these results and identify further steps necessary to design improved embodied locomotion control techniques that do not require actuated motion platforms.
We propose a high-performance GPU implementation of Ray Histogram Fusion (RHF), a denoising method for stochastic global illumination rendering. Based on the CPU implementation of the original algorithm, we present a naive GPU implementation and the necessary optimization steps. Eventually, we show that our optimizations increase the performance of RHF by two orders of magnitude when compared to the original CPU implementation and one order of magnitude compared to the naive GPU implementation. We show how the quality for identical rendering times relates to unfiltered path tracing and how much time is needed to achieve identical quality when compared to an unfiltered path traced result. Finally, we summarize our work and describe possible future applications and research based on this.
Rendering techniques for design evaluation and review or for visualizing large volume data often use computationally expensive ray-based methods. Due to the number of pixels and the amount of data, these methods often do not achieve interactive frame rates. A view direction based rendering technique renders the users central field of view in high quality whereas the surrounding is rendered with a level of detail approach depending on the distance to the users central field of view thus giving the opportunity to increase rendering efficiency. We propose a prototype implementation and evaluation of a focus-based rendering technique based on a hybrid ray tracing/sparse voxel octree rendering approach.
This presentation gives an overview of current research in the area of high quality rendering and visualization at the Institute of Visual Computing (IVC). Our research facility has some unique software and hardware installations of which we will describe a large, ultra- high resolution (72 megapixel) video wall in this presentation.
A recent trend in interactive environments are large, ultra high resolution displays (LUHRDs). Compared to other large interactive installations, like the CAVE tm , LUHRDs are usually flat or (slightly) curved and have a significantly higher resolution, offering new research and application opportunities.
This tutorial provides information for researchers and engineers who plan to install and use a large ultra-high resolution display. We will give detailed information on the hardware and software of recently created and established installations and will show the variety of possible approaches. Also, we will talk about rendering software, rendering techniques and interaction for LUHRDs, as well as applications.
Traffic simulations for virtual environments are concerned with the behavior of individual traffic participants. The complexity of behavior in these simulations is often rather simple to abide by the constraints of processing resources. In sophisticated traffic simulations, the behavior of individual traffic participants is also modeled, but the focus lies on the overall behavior of the entire system, e.g. to identify possible bottle necks of traffic flow [8].