Course Virtual Reality

Prof. Dr. Bernd Fröhlich
Dr. rer. nat. Alexander Kulik

Dipl.-Mediensys.wiss. André Kunert
M.Sc. Ephraim Schott

In recent years, Virtual Reality (VR) has become increasingly popular in research, entertainment, and education. VR systems allow one or multiple users to interact with a computer-simulated environment presented by an immersive display medium. In this course, you will study the theoretical, technical, and applied foundations of modern Virtual Reality systems.

The course starts by teaching the essentials of computer graphics and stereoscopic viewing required to realize VR applications. After that, you will explore the fundamentals of 3D input devices and 3D interaction techniques, including selection, manipulation, and navigation in virtual environments. The final part of the course builds on the previously acquired knowledge and focuses on collaborative VR systems for multiple collocated and distributed users.

The lecture is accompanied by a lab class in which the core topics of the course are deepened and implemented in the game engine Unity3D. Unity applications will be scripted in C#.

Note that, due to the on-going Corona pandemic the lab class of the virtual reality course is going to be held fully online.

Please visit the course's Moodle page for further information and lab-class registration. The enrollment key for the lab-class is: weimar_vr_2020

News

  • Lecture will start on 3 November 2020
  • Lab class will start on 6 November 2020

Course Organization

Instructors

Prof. Dr. Bernd Fröhlich [e-mail]
Dr. rer. nat. Alexander Kulik [e-mail]

Teaching Assistants

Dipl.-Mediensys.wiss. André Kunert [e-mail]
M.Sc. Ephraim Schott [e-mail]

Lecture Schedule

Tuesdays, 3:15 PM - 4:45 PM online in Moodle
Introduction on 3 November 2020

Lab Class Schedule

Fridays, 9:30 AM - 11:30 AM online in Moodle
Introduction on 6 November 2020

Target Audience

M.Sc. Computer Science for Digital Media
M.Sc. Computer Science and Media
M.Sc. Human-Computer Interaction

ECTS

Lecture and Lab Class: 4.5 ECTS
Lecture, Lab Class and Final Project: 6 ECTS

Lecture Materials

The documents from the WS 2019/20 course serve as a basis and will be further developed. The files are only accessible within the university network using a password provided during the first lecture (Username if necessary: vr). Adobe Acrobat Reader works well with protected files. Please do not redistribute the materials.

 

DateTopicDownload
3 November 2020Introductionpdf
10 November 2020Graphics Basics and Scenegraphspdf

 

 

    Lab Class Materials

    The lab class will be administered on Moodle. Please follow the link and find further information.

    Grading

    Your grade for this course is determined by the successful completion of the lab class (1/3) and a final oral examination (2/3).

    During the lab class, you will be asked to complete both theory and practice assignments. You need to achieve at least half of the points over all graded assignment sheets to pass. The average grade across all assignments is your total grade for the lab class. Group work in pairs of two students is permitted.

    The final examination is an oral discussion covering all topics of the lecture and lab class. Appointments for oral examinations will be made individually at the end of the course.

    The following scheme is applied to convert percentages to grades:

    GradePercentage
    1.0>= 95.0
    1.1[93.5 - 95.0)
    1.2[92.0 - 93.5)
    1.3[90.5 - 92.0)
    1.4[89.0 - 90.5)
    1.5[87.5 - 89.0)
    1.6[86.0 - 87.5)
    1.7[84.5 - 86.0)
    1.8[83.0 - 84.5)
    1.9[81.5 - 83.0)
    2.0[80.0 - 81.5)
    2.1[78.5 - 80.0)
    2.2[77.0 - 78.5)
    2.3[75.5 - 77.0)
    2.4[74.0 - 75.5)
    2.5[72.5 - 74.0)
    [...]
    3.0[65.0 - 66.5)
    [...]
    4.0[50.0 - 51.5)
    5.0 (fail)[00.0 - 50.0)

    Final Project (optional)

    The final project (graded separately and awarded additional 1.5 ECTS) requires the participants to apply the obtained theoretical and practical skills of the course in the design, implementation and presentation of an individual small research project. In particular, you will be asked to develop a concept, come up with an effective and efficient implementation and present your results in a concise talk. This is an invaluable opportunity to work on an interesting topic of your choice with the state-of-the-art VR-hardware available in our lab like head-mounted displays, multi-user projection systems and multi-touch tabletops. Group work in pairs of two students is permitted.