NDAB20008U Virtual Reality (VR)

Volume 2022/2023
Content

The aim of the course is to teach students to design and develop for virtual reality (VR). Participants will learn to develop for VR in a standard tool such as Unity, create interactions between avatar bodies and virtual objects, and design selection and manipulation techniques for VR. The course focuses both on the technical aspects of VR as well on the human-centred aspects. These skills are needed to develop for headset-based VR, but also in developing for other headset-based technologies, such as augmented reality. Learning will happen through lectures and hands-on VR development exercises.

Learning Outcome

At course completion, the successful student will have

Knowledge of

  • Basic physics of objects and 3D surroundings (e.g., rigid body kinematics & dynamics)

  • Basic kinematics of bodies

  • Sensing technologies

  • Interaction techniques for VR

  • The user’s perception of virtual surroundings and bodies

  • Uses of VR

Skills in

  • Developing in a standard VR tool such as Unity

  • Developing interactions between bodies, objects, and surroundings

  • Tracking the user’s actions (e.g., of hands, bodies, eyes)

  • Designing interaction techniques

Competences to

  • Collaborate in a group to develop VR applications that match particular goals.

  • Reason about and justifying design decisions of VR/AR interaction techniques

  • Apply a selection of current sensing technologies for VR and thinking forward to future ones

  • Analyze the pros and cons of display technologies, sensing technologies, and interaction techniques from both the technological and the user’s perspectives

Selected papers and book chapters. See Absalon when the course is set up.

 

Strong programming skills at the level of final year BSc student. Furthermore, it is crucial in order to take the course that you have passed the course Interaction design (Interaktionsdesign) or a similar course.
Lectures, classroom discussions, hands-on programming exercises, 3 hand-in assignments in groups, and a project in groups.
  • Category
  • Hours
  • Lectures
  • 64
  • Exercises
  • 64
  • Project work
  • 77
  • Exam
  • 1
  • Total
  • 206
Written
Individual
Collective
Credit
7,5 ECTS
Type of assessment
Oral examination, 20 minutes per person
Type of assessment details
The overall assessment is based on a group project report and an oral exam (without preparation). The exam is a group exam, which means that the groups present their project together, and are then examined individually.
Exam registration requirements

To qualify for the exam, the students must have handed in and got accepted 3 group assignments.

 

Aid
All aids allowed
Marking scale
7-point grading scale
Censorship form
No external censorship
Several internal examiners
Re-exam

As in the ordinary exam, the assessment is based on a project report and an oral exam. If the project report uses parts of a project done in a group during the course, the student must detail their contributions on the hand-in for the re-exam. In the re-exam, both the oral presentation and the exam are individual.

If the student is not yet qualified, then qualification can be achieved by resubmitting assignments and have those approved. If parts of the assignments were done in groups during the course, the student must detail their contributions to those on the resubmissions. The assignments must be submitted no later than three weeks before the re-exam date.

Criteria for exam assesment

See Learning Outcomes.