Litcius/Paper detail

Comparing Order Picking Guidance with Microsoft Hololens, Magic Leap, Google Glass XE and Paper

Georgianna Lin, Tanmoy Panigrahi, Jon Womack, Devansh Jatin Ponda, Pramod Kotipalli, Thad Starner

202124 citationsDOI

Abstract

Head-worn displays (HWDs) are an efficient and cost-effective means to guide users in order picking, a task that requires users to alternate their attention between the physical environment and the HWD's virtual image. After training 12 participants to expertise in picking, we compare three significantly different HWDs: Magic Leap One, Microsoft Hololens, and Google Glass Explorer Edition against paper pick lists (the industry standard). We find that previous findings on HWD benefits during such tasks are not reflected in all HWDs, suggesting that hardware design significantly influences efficacy. Based on experimental results and observations, we highlight challenges such as head weight, mounting, display clarity, field of view (FOV), and display position and discuss their possible effects on user comfort, user preference, task speed, and task accuracy.

Topics & Concepts

Computer scienceMAGIC (telescope)Task (project management)Human–computer interactionAugmented realityOptical head-mounted displayComputer graphics (images)Artificial intelligenceEngineeringSystems engineeringPhysicsQuantum mechanicsVirtual Reality Applications and ImpactsErgonomics and Musculoskeletal DisordersTactile and Sensory Interactions