Exploration of Radar-based Obstacle Visualizations to Support Safety and Presence in Camera-Free Outdoor VR
Avinash Ajit Nargund, Andrew L. Huard, Tobias H\"ollerer, Misha Sra

TL;DR
This study explores radar-based obstacle visualization techniques in outdoor VR to enhance safety and presence without compromising privacy, comparing three visualization methods through user testing.
Contribution
It introduces WaveWalkerClone for outdoor radar sensing and evaluates three novel obstacle visualization techniques in VR, highlighting their effects on user safety and experience.
Findings
All visualization methods supported safety and awareness.
Different techniques influenced perceived effort and frustration.
User preferences varied across visualization styles.
Abstract
Outdoor virtual reality (VR) places users in dynamic physical environments where they must remain aware of real-world obstacles, including static structures and moving bystanders, while immersed in a virtual scene. This dual demand introduces challenges for both user safety and presence. Millimeter-wave (mmWave) radar offers a privacy-preserving alternative to camera-based sensing by detecting obstacles without capturing identifiable visual imagery, yet effective methods for communicating its sparse spatial information to users remain underexplored. In this work, we developed and validated WaveWalkerClone, a reproduction of the WaveWalker system, to establish reliable radar- and GPS-IMU-based sensing under varied outdoor lighting conditions. Building on this feasibility validation, we conducted a user study (n=18) comparing three visualization techniques for radar-detected obstacles :…
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Taxonomy
TopicsIndoor and Outdoor Localization Technologies · Interactive and Immersive Displays · Mobile Crowdsensing and Crowdsourcing
