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Judder

378 bytes added, 18:00, 7 April 2015
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Judder is a mixture of [[smearing]] and [[strobing]] in a [[HMD]]. Judder becomes apparent when the display is moved quickly, such as when you rapidly turn your head. The phenomenon can significantly reduce the visual quality of a [[VR]] and [[AR]] displays and cause [[simulator sickness]]. The Judder is caused by low [[refresh rate]] or high [[persistence]] of the display. Smearing occurs when each pixel moves across the retina while it is lit. After smearing, the slight jump causes strobing.<ref>http://blogs.valvesoftware.com/abrash/down-the-vr-rabbit-hole-fixing-judder/</ref>
==How to Reduce Judder==
Judder can be reduced by increasing the [[refresh rate]] of the display. When refresh rate is high enough, smearing and strobing will not longer be visible to the human eyes, effectively eliminating the phenomenon. To truly eliminate smearing, refresh rate of 1000 Hz is needed. Currently this is almost impossible to do due to technical limitations. Another, more practical, method is to use [[low persistence]] display. In a low persistence display, each pixel is lit for a very short amount of time, less than 2 ms. Because lit pixel will no longer move across the retina, smearing dissipates. While smearing is gone, strobing can become more visible (smearing no longer hides it). Having higher refresh rate will solve the strobing issue.
 
==Timewarp and Judder==
Dropped frames can cause judder. When the engine takes too long to render a frame, the frame will be missed, causing judder. This can be mediated by using [[timewarp]]. While sing timewarp to solve this problem works well in a rotational-only system, problems can a raise when positional / translational tracking is introduced.
==References==

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