| Jacobson, J. & Lewis, M., An Experimental comparison of three methods for collision handling in virtual environments, in Proceedings of the 41st Annual Meeting of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society, Sept. 22-26, Albuquerque, NM, 1997. |
....collisions between them. However, interaction with a user was not considered. Furthermore, as we shall see later, a force field alone is not sufficient to prevent collisions with objects. Since the work reported here was conducted, our attention has been drawn to the work of Jacobson and Lewis [14]. Our experiments and ideas are very similar to theirs, although they do not use force fields. THE FORCE FIELD GUIDED APPROACH The fundamental idea in the new approach is that each object in a virtual environment is surrounded by a repulsive force field. Each field extends to a pre determined ....
Jeffrey Jacobson and Michael Lewis. An experimental comparison of three methods for collision handling in virtual environments. In Proc. Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Conference, 1997.
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Jacobson, J. & Lewis, M., An Experimental comparison of three methods for collision handling in virtual environments, in Proceedings of the 41st Annual Meeting of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society, Sept. 22-26, Albuquerque, NM, 1997.
No context found.
J. Jacobson, and M. Lewis, "An experimental comparison of three methods for collision handling in virtual environments", Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society 41st Annual Meeting, Human Factors Society, Santa Monica, CA, 1997, pp. 1273-1277.
No context found.
Jeffrey Jacobson and Michael Lewis. An experimental comparison of three methods for collision handling in virtual environments. In Proc. Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Conference, 1997.
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