Augmenting reality: On the shared history of perceptual illusion and video projection mapping
Alvaro Pastor

TL;DR
This paper explores the historical development and technological advancements in perceptual illusions and video projection mapping, highlighting their role in creating immersive, real-time augmented reality experiences that blend virtual images with physical environments.
Contribution
It provides a historical perspective and discusses recent technological progress in projection mapping, emphasizing its potential for immersive augmented reality applications.
Findings
Projection mapping extends traditional illusions into real-time, dynamic environments.
Every surface can serve as a display, enabling untethered synthetic reality experiences.
Technological milestones have made immersive, all-encompassing augmented reality feasible.
Abstract
Perceptual illusions based on the spatial correspondence between objects and displayed images have been pursued by artists and scientists since the 15th century, mastering optics to create crucial techniques as the linear perspective and devices as the Magic Lantern. Contemporary video projection mapping inherits and further extends this drive to produce perceptual illusions in space by incorporating the required real time capabilities for dynamically superposing the imaginary onto physical objects under fluid real world conditions. A critical milestone has been reached in the creation of the technical possibilities for all encompassing, untethered synthetic reality experiences available to the plain senses, where every surface may act as a screen and the relation to everyday objects is open to alterations.
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Taxonomy
TopicsVirtual Reality Applications and Impacts · Augmented Reality Applications · 3D Surveying and Cultural Heritage
