New data arena allows display of 'big data'


Friday, 07 August, 2015

The University of Technology Sydney has opened a new Data Arena that will allow users to view and interact with data in new ways.

Viewers stand in the middle of a large cylindrical screen, four metres high and 10 metres in diameter. A high-performance computer graphics system drives six 3D-stereo video projectors, edge-blended to create a three-dimensional panorama with image resolution 20,000 x 1200 pixels. A stereo-visual effect can be achieved by wearing active-shutter glasses, which present separate left/right views.

Professor Mary-Anne Williams, director of UTS’s Innovation and Enterprise Research Laboratory — also known as The Magic Lab — is discussing the Data Arena at the ACI Connect Conference in Sydney, 12-13 August.

The Data Arena is an immersive facility that will help researchers as well as business and government to simplify complex information. UTS Vice-Chancellor Professor Attila Brungs described it as breaking ground both in terms of data visualisation, manipulation and comprehension, and in fundamental human computer/data interaction.

“UTS is crossing traditional boundaries of knowledge by harnessing new technologies such as the Data Arena. The technology is so new even we don’t know what the limits of its potential may be, whether for research, adding new knowledge to what we teach or how we can work in new ways with industry,” he said.

“It’s a bit like inventing a microscope, looking into it for the first time and realising tiny life forms exist in a drop of water. Each time researchers and industry partners first experience the Data Arena’s capabilities, new ideas are born about how this new way of seeing the world can give our research maximum impact.”

Professor Williams’ talk at ACI Connect — ‘Fast-Tracking the Future with Advanced Robotics and Data Analytics’ — will cover how robots work side by side with humans in factories, unload containers from ships, perform delicate surgery on people, drive cars, rescue people in dangerous situations and enrich the life of autistic children, as well as looking at how data analytics allow robots to comprehend and exploit sensory data, find patterns and insights to leverage, and to plan by making predictions.

The ACI Connect conference is at Sydney Olympic Park on 12-13 August. More information can be found at www.aciconnect.com.au.

Source: Engineers Australia

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