August 8, 2001
CHICAGO, IL -- The National Science Foundation has awarded a
three-year, $700,000 equipment grant to the Electronic Visualization
Laboratory (EVL) at the University of Illinois at Chicago to develop the
AGAVE: Access Grid Autostereo Virtual Environment.
AGAVE (pronounced agavay) will be a viable, scalable visualization
instrument easily adaptable to the scientist's workspace--particularly
those using the Access Grid (a multi-screen environment that supports
large-scale, distributed group meetings connected by very-high-speed
networks). The Access Grid
is an Alliance project anchored by Argonne National Laboratory
The goal of AGAVE is to augment the Access Grid to allow national and
international collaborators to immersively share three-dimensional
content, such as scientific and engineering visualizations, without
polarized or shutter glasses. EVL, as an Access Grid node and development
partner, will build AGAVE to be deployable as a separate display screen
placed along side the Access Grid display screens, so that standard 2D
content can be viewed simultaneously with 3D content.
To this end, EVL has prototyped the Varrier(TM) technique for
displaying high-quality, computed autostereograms-in-motion, made possible
by the advent of relatively high-resolution, dimensionally stable LCD
panel technology. With PC graphics in clusters now allowing affordable
design and implementation of arrays of displays, very high resolution can
be achieved by tiling these panels.
Initial prototyping efforts to augment the Access Grid for
visualization has yielded a low-cost, PC-driven passive-stereo projection
system, which allows distributed audiences to view and interact with 3D
immersive content, but still requires the use of passive polarization
glasses similar to those worn to view 3D films.
The AGAVE, tiled, high-resolution autostereo display will be built and
tested over the next three years, and will integrate well with
high-speed networks.
About EVL
The Electronic Visualization Laboratory at the University of Illinois
at Chicago is the nation's oldest interdisciplinary graduate laboratory
offering degrees in electronic visualization. Since inventing the
CAVE R Virtual Reality Theater in 1991,
EVL's focus has been the development and deployment of software, hardware,
networking and communications tools in support of collaborative
tele-immersive virtual reality applications.
About the Alliance
The National Computational Science Alliance ("The Alliance") is a
nationwide partnership of more than 50 academic, government and
business organizations working together to prototype an advanced
computational infrastructure for the new century. This infrastructure,
called the Grid, is rapidly developing into a ubiquitous, pervasive,
national-scale information infrastructure which links supercomputers,
virtual environments, scientific instruments, large databases and research
teams.
Contact:
Laura Wolf
Electronic Visualization Laboratory
University of Illinois at Chicago
laura@evl.uic.edu