Enhancing Realism in Holographic Augmented Reality Displays through Occlusion Handling
Journal:
arXiv
Published Date:
May 2, 2025
Abstract
In this paper, an occlusion-capable holographic augmented-reality (AR)
display is proposed, and its ability to enhance AR imagery through occlusion is
demonstrated. Holographic displays can generate ideal three-dimensional (3D)
virtual images and have recently shown rapid advancements, particularly in
noise reduction through learning-based approaches. However, these displays
still face challenges in improving image quality for AR scenarios because
holographic virtual images are simply superimposed onto the real world, leading
to a loss of contrast and visibility. To address this, an occlusion optics,
which can mask designated areas of the real world, is incorporated into
holographic AR displays. The proposed system employs a folded 4f system with a
digital micromirror device and sequentially operates as both a real-world mask
and an active Fourier filter. This approach transforms traditionally
translucent holographic images into perceptually opaque ones while
simultaneously eliminating unwanted noise terms from pixelated holographic
displays. Furthermore, active Fourier filtering expands the virtual image field
of view through time-multiplexed operation and supports a novel binary hologram
optimization algorithm that performs especially well for sparse virtual
content. The implementation successfully achieves opaque holographic 3D image
presentation, significantly improving contrast and image quality while
producing highly realistic 3D AR scenes with optically cast shadows.