Effective close-range accuracy comparison of microsoft hololens generation one and two using vuforia imagetargets

Conference Paper (2021)
Author(s)

J.S.I. Rieder (TU Delft - Mechatronic Design, TU Delft - Stichting SAM|XL)

Danielle Van Tol (TU Delft - Mechatronic Design)

Doris Aschenbrenner (TU Delft - Mechatronic Design)

Research Group
Mechatronic Design
Copyright
© 2021 J.S.I. Rieder, D.H. van Tol, D. Aschenbrenner
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1109/VRW52623.2021.00158
More Info
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Publication Year
2021
Language
English
Copyright
© 2021 J.S.I. Rieder, D.H. van Tol, D. Aschenbrenner
Research Group
Mechatronic Design
Pages (from-to)
552-553
ISBN (electronic)
9780738113678
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Abstract

This paper analyzes the effective accuracy for close-range operations for the first and the second generation of Microsoft HoloLens in combination with Vuforia Image Targets in a black-box approach. The implementation of Augmented Reality (AR) on optical see-through (OST), head-mounted devices (HMDs) has been proven viable for a variety of tasks, such as assembly, maintenance, or educational purposes. For most of these applications, minor localization errors are tolerated since no accurate alignment between the artificial and the real parts is required. For other potential applications, these accuracy errors represent a major obstacle. The "realistically achievable"accuracy remains largely unknown for close-range usages (e.g. within "arms-reach"of a user) for both generations of Microsoft HoloLens.Thus, the authors developed a method to benchmark and compare the applicability of these devices for tasks that demand a higher accuracy like composite manufacturing or medical surgery assistance. Furthermore, the method can be used for a broad variety of devices, establishing a platform for bench-marking and comparing these and future devices. This paper analyzes the performance of test users, which were asked to pinpoint the perceived location of holographic cones. The image recognition software package "Vuforia"was used to determine the spatial transform of the predefined ImageTarget. By comparing the user-markings with the algorithmic locations, a mean deviation of 2.59 ±1.79 [mm] (HL 1) and 1.11 ±0.98 [mm] (HL 2) has been found, which means that the mean accuracy improved by 57.1% and precision by 45.4%. The highest mean accuracy of a single test user has been measured with 0.47 ±1.683 [mm] (HL 1) and 0.085 ± 0.567 [mm] (HL 2).

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