"Why Skype when you can talk to a life-size 3D holographic image of another person," asks professor Roel Vertegaal, director of the Human Media Lab at the Queen's University, Canada, and the project leader.
The technology developed by Vertegaal and his team is called TeleHuman and looks like something from the Star Trek holodeck, according to a Queen's statement.
Two people simply stand in front of their own life-size cylindrical pods and can talk to a 3D hologram-like images of each other. Cameras capture and track 3D video and convert into the life-size image. Since the 3D video image is visible 360 degrees around the pod, the person can walk around it to see the other person's side or back.
While the technology may seem like it comes from a galaxy far, far away, it's not as complicated as most would think. Vertegaal and his team used mostly existing hardware - including a 3D projector, a 1.8 metre-tall translucent acrylic cylinder and a convex mirror.
The researchers used the same pod to create another application called BodiPod, which presents an interactive 3D anatomy model of the human body. The model can be explored 360 degrees around the model through gestures and speech interactions.
When people approach the pod, they can wave in thin air to peel off layers of tissue. In X-ray mode, as users get closer to the Pod they can see deeper into the anatomy, revealing the model's muscles, organs and bone structure.
Voice commands such as "show brain" or "show heart" will automatically zoom into a 3D model of a brain or heart.
Vertegaal unveiled TeleHuman and BodiPod at CHI 2012, the ongoing premier international conference on human-computer interaction, in Austin, Texas, US.
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