Neumann Library hosts discussion on virtual and augmented futures
February 13, 2020 | UHCL Staff
Univeristy of Houston-Clear Lake’s Alfred R. Neumann Library will be hosting a panel discussion titled “Virtual and Augmented Futures,” spotlighting
augmented and virtual reality and their implications for teaching, learning and future
careers. The event, to be held Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2-3:30 p.m., brings together seven
experts in fields including technology, software engineering, psychology and digital
media.
Neumann Library Executive Director Vivienne McClendon said that the event is ahead of the opening of an XR lab — a combination of augmented
and virtual reality, that she hopes will open in the library this fall.
“After the panel discussion, people will have the opportunity to use and interact
with VR headsets and try them out,” McClendon said. “The panelists, who include UH-Clear
Lake Associate Professor of Communications and Digital Media Michael Brims and Associate Professor of Psychology Nicholas Kelling, will address questions, including the biggest challenges facing XR and how businesses
can benefit from its use.”
Two of the panelists are NASA engineers, continued McClendon, and training astronauts
in a VR lab has proven to be the most effective way to train them for their missions.
“I believe VR will replace most of our simulator environments that are more hardware
than software,” she said. “Typically, most of our simulators are pods or other pieces
of very expensive hardware that make a person feel they’re piloting a plane, for example.
Soon, VR and AR will replace these.”
Coming to the panel discussion event is a way for students and faculty to try out
the AR and VR goggles. “If a professor would like to do a research project or use
this actively in their class, they can try out the headsets and know what they’d like
to buy for their own lab,” she said. “This is wearable technology. In the future,
you’ll just look at the thing you want and it goes there because it will recognize
what your eyes are focusing on. It’s a step toward no longer having a keyboard, and
the potential for accessibility is great.”
McClendon has co-edited a book titled “Educational Media and Technology Yearbook,”
which takes a comprehensive look at innovations and developments in the field of media
and technology information programs.
Read more online about the Alfred R. Neumann Library.
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