Augmented Reality

May 30th, 2019

Augmented Reality is changing the way Australians interact with digital systems at work and at home, such as enabling emergency services to ‘beam in’ to help administer first aid, to allowing maintenance workers to interact directly with smart buildings, and tapping into vast catalogues of 3D data.

Minister Seselja (left) and Minister Barr (right) in the Immersive Environments Lab.

“AR technologies can sense elements of the physical environment and enable delivery of holographic data right where and when it is needed most,” said Dr Matt Adcock, Senior Research Engineer and Experimental Scientist at CSIRO’s Data61.

“Some smartphone apps already let users see, for instance, what furniture would look like in their own home.

“But while the hardware is evolving at a rapid pace, the digital services that can run on that hardware are just beginning to be explored.”

We are currently working on AR projects related to health, future cities, education, agriculture and manufacturing, to name a few.

Immersive Environments Lab

In May 2018, CSIRO’s Data61 opened the Immersive Environments Lab, a facility purpose-built for applied research into novel augmented reality, virtual reality and 3D Web technologies—industries set to be worth $143 billion by 2021.

The Lab features a fleet of wearable holographic computing devices, spatial cameras, 3D object scanners, haptic (virtual touch) displays, interactive projection mapping stages and motion capture rigs.

The CSIRO building which houses the lab contains a cloud-based smart glasses system, developed by Data61, which displays historical and real-time energy usage data overlaid directly on the appliances consuming the energy.

It is an indication of what is possible in smart buildings of the future.

“We’ve also developed an application for the Powerhouse Museum that uses our multi-user AR techniques,” Dr Adcock said.

“A tour guide is able to share a virtual holographic experience with a tour group through smart glasses.

“While the tour guide controls the general narrative, and the holograms appear in exactly the same place to everyone, each individual can investigate specific aspects of the museum objects for themselves.

“This is a whole new way of collaboratively experiencing museum collections.”

The Immersive Environments Lab is also collaborating with Australian SMEs which are aiming to be early to market with new AR services, and Government partners that are adopting research from the Lab.

CEO of Data61 Adrian Turner said the Lab was a unique facility with connections into Data61’s deep expertise – in areas such as decision sciences, data sharing and visualisation, collaborative systems, Internet of Things, machine learning, in-situ analytics and robotics – as well as CSIRO’s domain expertise in manufacturing and agriculture.

“Augmented reality now is where the Web was several decades ago – on the cusp of broad adoption, as the technology and compelling use cases have matured,” Mr Turner said.

“The Immersive Environments Lab will facilitate collaboration between industry, government and universities to place Australia at the forefront of this next wave of technology which will reinvent our industries and create new ways of working and playing.”

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