4.7 Article

Tensor Displays: Compressive Light Field Synthesis using Multilayer Displays with Directional Backlighting

Journal

ACM TRANSACTIONS ON GRAPHICS
Volume 31, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

ASSOC COMPUTING MACHINERY
DOI: 10.1145/2185520.2185576

Keywords

light fields; automultiscopic 3D displays; multilayer LCDs; directional backlighting; nonnegative tensor factorization

Funding

  1. MIT Media Lab
  2. DARPA SCENICC
  3. NSF [IIS-1116452]
  4. DARPA MOSAIC
  5. Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellowship
  6. DARPA

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We introduce tensor displays: a family of compressive light field displays comprising all architectures employing a stack of time-multiplexed, light-attenuating layers illuminated by uniform or directional backlighting (i.e., any low-resolution light field emitter). We show that the light field emitted by an N-layer, M-frame tensor display can be represented by an Nth-order, rank-M tensor. Using this representation we introduce a unified optimization framework, based on nonnegative tensor factorization (NTF), encompassing all tensor display architectures. This framework is the first to allow joint multilayer, multiframe light field decompositions, significantly reducing artifacts observed with prior multilayer-only and multiframe-only decompositions; it is also the first optimization method for designs combining multiple layers with directional backlighting. We verify the benefits and limitations of tensor displays by constructing a prototype using modified LCD panels and a custom integral imaging backlight. Our efficient, GPU-based NTF implementation enables interactive applications. Through simulations and experiments we show that tensor displays reveal practical architectures with greater depths of field, wider fields of view, and thinner form factors, compared to prior automultiscopic displays.

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