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Image: After the Deinonychus skull has been scanned and mapped, the first overlay is added--the muscle groups—via augmented reality.<BR>
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This is one of several steps in the “augmented reality” process, where researchers use stereoscopic, three-dimensional overlays in combination with synchronized audio and light effects to “paint” a fossil with digital soft tissue and muscle. The result is a dynamic model that reveals how the dinosaur may have looked and how it may have attacked its prey.  <I><B>[Image 4 in a series of 6 images; see also, Virtual Showcase and Augmented Reality Steps 1 through 5.]</B></I><BR>
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<I>For further information about this research, including a short film about the augmented reality process used with the Deinonychus skull in this series of images, see the <a href=October 22, 2002 NSF News Tip.

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The Virtual Showcase is a half-mirrored, conical chamber fitted with numerous projectors and lighting controls into which fossils are placed. Up to two users stand outside of the showcase and wear special glasses while the researchers control the lighting and projected graphics, creating a 3-D illusion of flesh and muscle enveloping original bone. The Showcase will enable paleontologists to communicate their research results to a novice audience in an exciting and effective way.

The paleontology applications of AR were developed by NSF-supported researchers Stephen Gatesy of Brown University and Lawrence Witmer of Ohio University, in collaboration with Oliver Bimber of Bauhaus University in Germany, and colleagues at the Mitsubishi Electronic Research Laboratory in Cambridge, Massachusetts and the Fraunhofer Center for Research in Computer Graphics in Providence, Rhode Island.

Using a predatory dinosaur called Deinonychus as a test subject, the researchers used AR to determine where powerful jaw muscles may have attached to the animal’s skull and hypothesized where muscle, skin, and other parts would fit, based upon observations of closely related modern animals. This information, along with a 3-D scan of the fossil, were stored in a standard desktop computer.

In addition to research, AR technology may also have future applications in museum exhibits, augmenting fossils for a variety of educational purposes and enhancing details on display specimens.

This research was funded by NSF grant DBI 99-74424 (awarded to Stephen M. Gatesy) and IBN 96-01174 (awarded to Lawrence M. Witmer). Thumbnail">


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