DISPLAY SYSTEM AND METHOD
20190335164 ยท 2019-10-31
Inventors
- DIRK ENGELEN (HEUSDEN-ZOLDER, BE)
- Jochen Renaat Van Gheluwe (Lommel, BE)
- Philip Steven Newton (Waalre, NL)
- Dzmitry Viktorovich Aliakseyeu (Eindhoven, NL)
Cpc classification
H04N2013/40
ELECTRICITY
H04N13/302
ELECTRICITY
H04N21/41415
ELECTRICITY
H04N21/44218
ELECTRICITY
H04N21/431
ELECTRICITY
H04N21/4722
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H04N13/302
ELECTRICITY
H04N21/4722
ELECTRICITY
H04N21/442
ELECTRICITY
H04N21/414
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
The invention provides a display system which incorporates two display devices. A first is larger than a second, but with a lower resolution. The higher resolution second display is a directional display and it has its output area within the overall output area of the first display. This system integrates a general display for long range viewing by multiple people with a short range higher resolution display for interaction with one or a small number of users.
Claims
1. A display system comprising: a first display device having a first display output area, adapted to display a first image with a first display resolution and a first lateral range of output directions; a second display device having a second display output area and a second display resolution higher than the first display resolution, wherein the second display output area is smaller than the first display output area and is positioned within the outer limit of the first display output area and thus fills a window in the first display output area; wherein the second display device is adapted to display a second image with the second display resolution in a second lateral range of output directions which is narrower than the first lateral range of output directions, wherein the second display device is adapted to display a third image which is different to the second image in a third lateral range of output directions which is wider than the second lateral range of output directions, but excluding the second lateral range of output directions, wherein the third lateral range of output directions is equal to the first lateral range of output directions.
2. (canceled)
3. The system as claimed in claim 1, wherein the first image and the third image are parts of an overall combined image representing the same scene.
4. The system as claimed in claim 1, further comprising an output screen which is shared between the first and second display devices.
5. The system as claimed in claim 4, wherein the first display device comprises an array of light sources behind the output screen, and the second display device comprises a multi-view display.
6. The system as claimed in claim 1, wherein one view of the second display device is provided with the second display resolution and the other views simulate the first display resolution.
7. The system as claimed in claim 4, wherein the first display device comprises an array of light sources behind the output screen, and the second display device comprises a first array of fibers and collimators for providing relatively narrow directional light to the output screen and a second array of fibers for providing relatively broad directional light to the output screen.
8. The system as claimed in claim 7, wherein the first array of fibers are arranged with a greater resolution than the second array of fibers.
9. The system as claimed in claim 1, further comprising a directional audio system for providing audio to a user in front of the second display device.
10. The system as claimed in claim 1, further comprising a presence detection system, wherein the second display device is adapted to display a second image only when a user is present in front of the second display device.
11. A display method comprising: using a first display device to display a first image with a first display resolution and a first lateral range of output directions over a first display output area; and using a second display device to display a second image with: a second display resolution higher than the first display resolution; a second display output area which is smaller than the first display output area and which is positioned within the outer limit of the first display output area and thus fills a window in the first display output area; and a second lateral range of output directions which is narrower than the first lateral range of output directions, and using the second display device to display a third image which is different to the second image in a third lateral range of output directions which is wider than the second lateral range of output directions, but excluding the second lateral range of output directions, wherein the third lateral range of output directions is equal to the first lateral range of output directions.
12. The method as claimed in claim 11, wherein the first image and the third image are parts of an overall combined image representing the same scene.
13. The method as claimed in claim 11 comprising providing the first and second display device outputs through a shared output screen.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0037] Examples of the invention will now be described in detail with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE EMBODIMENTS
[0050] The invention provides a display system which incorporates two display devices. A first is larger than a second, but with a lower resolution. The higher resolution second display is a directional display and it has its output area within the overall output area of the first display. This system integrates a general display for long range viewing by multiple people with a short range higher resolution display for interaction with one or a small number of users and with a degree of privacy.
[0051]
[0052] It comprises a first display device having a first display output area 10. This output area is used to display a first image with a first display resolution and a first lateral range of output directions 12. It is for general viewing by the public, in particular for multiple viewers at the same time, and generally from a significant distance from the display. Thus, the lateral range of output directions is as large as possible, for example covering more than 100 degrees, and preferably more than 120 degrees. In practice, by providing illumination to a diffusive screen, the range of output directions may in theory cover 180 degrees. It has a relatively low resolution because it is for creating a general lighting atmosphere or for providing information to be read by many people from a large distance.
[0053] Typically, the area of the output of first display device is between 0.5 m.sup.2 and 10 m.sup.2 although even larger sizes are possible. For example, first display device may have a length between 1 m and 5 m and a height between 0.5 m and 2 m. One example is a length of 1.5 m and a height of 0.5 m. The first display has a wide viewing angle, for example 175 degrees visibility.
[0054] The first display device may use an array of light sources such as LEDs to build up a low resolution image using point light sources. It may be a single color or a multicolor display.
[0055] By way of specific example, the first display device may be as large as 5 m2 m, displaying content of a resolution of 400300 pixels. This gives a pitch of around 2 dpi (dots per inch) equivalent to 0.75 pixels per cm. Even lower pixel densities are however possible, such as a pixel pitch of 60 mm (0.16 pixels per cm). The LED pixels are for example formed as a string of discrete LED pixels mounted on a (flexible) surface. Other configurations and interconnections are possible. Exact viewing of content from all angles is not important for the first display device. Typically, the resolution is less than 5 dpi (2 pixels per cm).
[0056] A second display device has a second display output area 14 and a second display resolution higher than the first display resolution. The second display output area 14 is smaller than the first display output area 12 and it is positioned within the outer limit of the first display output area 10. In this way it fills a window in the first display output area 10. Typically, the area of the output of first display device is between 0.05 m.sup.2 and 0.3 m.sup.2. For example, first display device may have a length between 0.25 m and 0.7 m and a height between 0.2 m and 0.4 m. One example is a length of 540 mm and a height of 320 mm (comparable to a 60 cm 16:10 display). The second display device for example has a resolution of between 15 and 250 dpi (6 to 100 pixels per cm). Typically, the resolution is greater than 15 dpi (6 pixels per cm).
[0057] The second display device has a narrow viewing angle for example of 10 to 25 degrees. The second image is further more concentrated to the sweet spot (the experience spot) at which the content of the complete display is visible. The second display device is for example a flat multi-view display, but it may instead have a curved surface.
[0058] The second display device is used for displaying a higher resolution image with a narrow directional output. This means that most of the public within the space housing the display system do not see the high resolution output of the second display device. Instead, it is directed more narrowly to a viewer or a small number of viewers who are using the second display device for interaction. In particular, the higher resolution output of the second display device is directed forwards to a viewer standing in front of the second display output area 14. The higher resolution image for example comprises written text and images. There may be a user input device associated with the second display device, such as a touch pad.
[0059] For viewers who are not engaging with the second display device, the overall appearance of the first display device is less disrupted, because the distraction of the high resolution image is not seen. Instead, the perception of the first display output area 10 may be of a single display device. Only in front of the second display device is there an experience spot where the second display device output is seen.
[0060] The second display device may display a third image which is different to the second (high resolution) image in a third lateral range of output directions which is wider than the second lateral range of output directions. This means the second display device outputs first content to the users of the experience spot, and outputs a different image to other viewers. In particular, the third image provided by the second display device is intended to correspond to the missing part of the first image. This is explained with reference to
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[0064] The second display device also has a third lateral range 48 of output angles for a lower resolution image, in particular to fill in the missing part of the image displayed by the first display device 40 as explained above. This excludes the angle range 43, so that the third lateral range 48 extends between a non-zero minimum angle (e.g. 5 or 10 degrees each the side of the normal) to the maximum angle (i.e. up to 90 degrees each side of the normal).
[0065] The third range 48 may be equal to the first range 41 but an exact match is not essential.
[0066] In this way, the second display device is made much less noticeable to viewers who are outside the experience spot of the second display device, as seen in
[0067] The invention provides the integration of two display types into a single system. Two possible implementations are discussed below.
[0068] In each case, the first display device 40 is a luminous panel comprising an array of light sources 50 which illuminate the output area through a diffusive screen 52. This diffusive screen for example is a fabric screen.
[0069] The fabric is illuminated, and the illuminated pattern may then be visible across a full 180 degree viewing angle (subject of course to the issue that the perceived width of the screen decreases at increasing lateral viewing angles).
[0070] The luminous panel of the first display device 40 renders the low resolution lighting content on the complete panel. This content may be static or dynamic. Typical examples are moving clouds, water effects, nature effects. These effects are rendered on the fabric outer surface of the luminous panel.
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[0075] A pixel pitch of 40 dpi (16 pixels per cm) is an example. This resolution may be achieved with 0.25 mm diameter fibers and these fibers may be woven into a structure. Light projection is used to illuminate the fibers. Theoretically, up to 100 dpi is possible.
[0076] The fibers 70 each terminate with a collimator 71 that is attached to the fabric screen and directs light to the experience spot.
[0077] It is desired that the diffusion function of the screen is not used. Thus, the collimators may terminate directly beneath a non-diffusive surface layer of the screen 52, so that the diffusive function of the screen (for spreading the light of the light sources 50) is not used.
[0078] These fibers 70 form the high resolution rendering part of the system.
[0079] The fibers 72 terminate behind the screen 52 without output collimators. Their light output is shown as 73. It illuminates the screen in the same way as the light sources 50. The pitch between the fibers 72 may be much smaller than the pitch between the light sources 50 so that a high resolution content could be rendered. However, by suitably driving the display panel with low resolution image content, a low resolution output is generated which matches the output display of the first display device, namely the luminous panel.
[0080] The fiber array may be a regular array of fibers, with the same fiber pitch for the first and second fibers 70, 72. However, it is also possible for the first fibers 70 to be arranged with a greater resolution than the second fibers 72. In this case, the achievable resolution is lower outside the central viewing direction.
[0081] Mechanical stability is provided by the attachment of collimators 71 and fibers to the output screen, and a fixing plate may also be used to keep the internal fibers in position.
[0082] Note that the display 42 can be smaller than the surface on the screen to which the image is provided. Thus, an expanding array of fibers may be employed to expand the effective size of the native display.
[0083]
[0084] Multi-view display panels are well known. This design provides a much simpler implementation, and it also enables the second display device to implement an autostereoscopic display if desired. This is therefore a preferred implementation.
[0085] Multi-view display devices output different views or images in different directions. They are used in privacy displays and in autostereoscopic displays. By way of example, a standard display panel is provided with a view forming arrangement, such as an array of lenticular lenses, for directing different views in different directions.
[0086] Multi-view display panels may provide their different views simultaneously or time-sequentially, for example using a switchable barrier. A parallax barrier multi-view display is for example suitable.
[0087]
[0088] A design is preferred with a single cone of output images, so that there is no repetition of different images. Thus, the central image is provided only in the central direction and is not repeated at other viewing angles.
[0089] As in the example of
[0090] The display output 80 in the forward direction may be an autostereoscopic image.
[0091]
[0092] The screen fabric 52 is used to hide the different display infrastructures so that the diffuser 84 and display 42 cannot be distinguished easily visually. However, it is sufficiently transparent to avoid the obstruction of the light in the direction of the central view. A fabric that acts as a barrier (and thereby provide a diffusion function) in all directions except the orthogonal direction may be used for this purpose.
[0093] The multi-view display 42 may provide only two images. One image is the image or video content to be directed towards the experience spot. The other image is for all other views, and is the ambient view corresponding to the image of the first display device.
[0094] The system may also include a directional audio system. Various directional audio systems are known. Possible approaches include the use of ultrasound, speaker arrays with phase shifted audio, and electrostatic speakers. The directional audio output is then directed to the experience spot.
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[0096] The system may also be interactive. As shown in
[0097] As illustrated in
[0098] The system may also detect the people who are close to the panel but approaching the area of the second display device from the side. This is shown in
[0099] The second display device (when implemented as a multi-view display) may then direct a (distorted) side view 110 to the viewer indicate to the user that he or she is approaching an embedded information display and should therefore advance to the experience spot 112.
[0100]
[0101] The invention is of interest for public spaces in which a high resolution rendering of video or other content is needed for local consumption by a user. Outside this experience spot, the infrastructure is hidden and the high resolution content is not visible.
[0102] One example application is check-in terminals hidden within a larger panel, or information displays that provide personal information. It enables different information to be provided to viewers in different locations. The second display device may be for interactive use or it may simply provide information content which depends on the position and not on any specific input from a user.
[0103] It is explained above that the range of lateral viewing angles for the high resolution image is reduced. There may also be a restriction to the viewing angles in the up-down direction for example so that the high resolution content is not available from higher (e.g. when standing on a gallery) overlooking the display. This may be used to increase the privacy.
[0104] The input from the user for interacting with the second display device may include speech recognition or gesture recognition as well or instead of touch input as mentioned above.
[0105] The controller will comprise standard display drivers for the two display devices, with synchronized content, so that the wide views of the second display device complement the display data of the first display device.
[0106] Other variations to the disclosed embodiments can be understood and effected by those skilled in the art in practicing the claimed invention, from a study of the drawings, the disclosure, and the appended claims. In the claims, the word comprising does not exclude other elements or steps, and the indefinite article a or an does not exclude a plurality. The mere fact that certain measures are recited in mutually different dependent claims does not indicate that a combination of these measures cannot be used to advantage. Any reference signs in the claims should not be construed as limiting the scope.