PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

New centimeter-accurate GPS system could transform virtual reality and mobile devices

2015-05-05
(Press-News.org) AUSTIN, Texas -- Researchers in the Cockrell School of Engineering at The University of Texas at Austin have developed a centimeter-accurate GPS-based positioning system that could revolutionize geolocation on virtual reality headsets, cellphones and other technologies, making global positioning and orientation far more precise than what is currently available on a mobile device.

The researchers' new system could allow unmanned aerial vehicles to deliver packages to a specific spot on a consumer's back porch, enable collision avoidance technologies on cars and allow virtual reality (VR) headsets to be used outdoors. The researchers' new centimeter-accurate GPS coupled with a smartphone camera could be used to quickly build a globally referenced 3-D map of one's surroundings that would greatly expand the radius of a VR game. Currently, VR does not use GPS, which limits its use to indoors and usually a two- to three-foot radius.

"Imagine games where, rather than sit in front of a monitor and play, you are in your backyard actually running around with other players," said Todd Humphreys, assistant professor in the Department of Aerospace Engineering and Engineering Mechanics and lead researcher. "To be able to do this type of outdoor, multiplayer virtual reality game, you need highly accurate position and orientation that is tied to a global reference frame."

Humphreys and his team in the Radionavigation Lab have built a low-cost system that reduces location errors from the size of a large car to the size of a nickel -- a more than 100 times increase in accuracy. Humphreys collaborated with Professor Robert W. Heath from the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering and graduate students on the new technology, which they describe in a recent issue of GPS World.

Centimeter-accurate positioning systems are already used in geology, surveying and mapping, but the survey-grade antennas these systems employ are too large and costly for use in mobile devices. The breakthrough by Humphreys and his team is a powerful and sensitive software-defined GPS receiver that can extract centimeter accuracies from the inexpensive antennas found in mobile devices -- such precise measurements were not previously possible. The researchers anticipate that their software's ability to leverage low-cost antennas will reduce the overall cost of centimeter accuracy, making it economically feasible for mobile devices.

Humphreys and his team have spent six years building a specialized receiver, called GRID, to extract so-called carrier phase measurements from low-cost antennas. GRID currently operates outside the phone, but it will eventually run on the phone's internal processor.

To further develop this technology, Humphreys and his students recently co-founded a startup, called Radiosense. Humphreys and his team are working with Samsung to develop a snap-on accessory that will tell smartphones, tablets and virtual reality headsets their precise position and orientation.

The researchers designed their system to deliver precise position and orientation information -- how one's head rotates or tilts -- to less than one degree of measurement accuracy. This level of accuracy could enhance VR environments that are based on real-world settings, as well as improve other applications, including visualization and 3-D mapping.

Additionally, the researchers believe their technology could make a significant difference in people's daily lives, including transportation, where centimeter-accurate GPS could lead to better vehicle-to-vehicle communication technology.

"If your car knows in real time the precise position and velocity of an approaching car that is blocked from view by other traffic, your car can plan ahead to avoid a collision," Humphreys said.

INFORMATION:

Samsung provided funding to Humphreys' Radionavigation Lab at UT Austin for the centimeter-accurate global positioning system research and plans to continue funding related basic research.

The University of Texas at Austin is committed to transparency and disclosure of all potential conflicts of interest. All UT investigators involved with this research have filed their required financial disclosure forms with the university. Todd Humphreys and three of his graduate students -- Andrew Kerns, Daniel Shepard and Kenneth Mark Pesyna Jr.-- own equity positions in Radiosense LLC, a company they created to market high-precision, low-cost GPS positioning. The company is based on technology created in Humphreys' lab that Radiosense is licensing from UT, working with the university's Office of Technology Commercialization.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Changing attitudes about sex

2015-05-05
SAN DIEGO, Calif. (May 5, 2015)-- Acceptance of premarital sex is at an all-time high along with an acceptance of homosexuality, find researchers led by Jean M. Twenge from San Diego State University. The researchers -- also including Ryne Sherman from Florida Atlantic University and Brooke E. Wells from Hunter College -- analyzed data from the General Social Survey, a nationally representative survey of more than 33,000 U.S. adults taken between 1972 and 2012. They found substantial generational shifts in attitudes toward non-marital sex and number of sexual partners. ...

Proteomics provides new leads into nerve regeneration

2015-05-05
Using proteomics techniques to study injured optic nerves, researchers at Boston Children's Hospital have identified previously unrecognized proteins and pathways involved in nerve regeneration. Adding back one of these proteins--the oncogene c-myc--they achieved unprecedented optic nerve regeneration in mice when combined with two other known strategies. The findings were published online April 30 by the journal Neuron. Researchers have been trying for many decades to get injured nerves in the brain and spinal cord to regenerate. Various molecules have been targeted ...

Shedding light on rods

2015-05-05
"Imagine a tiny spotlight like those used in theatres but with a light ray measuring only a few nanometres, which shines light on a given spot but leaves everything else in the dark," explains Monica Mazzolini, SISSA research scientist, "That's how the optic fibres we used in our experiment work". Mazzolini, first author of a paper just published in PNAS, literally shut herself in a "darkroom" lit with infrared light only to stimulate rods, the light-sensitive cells of the retina (for night vision), with these extremely focused light beams in vitro. In their study, Mazzolini ...

Women hospitalized 60 percent more than men after emergency asthma treatment

2015-05-05
ARLINGTON HEIGHTS, Ill. (May 5, 2015) - While it may be a stereotype, it's also true that women seek medical care more frequently than men do. And a recent study shows that women with acute asthma who are treated in the emergency department (ED) are 60 percent more likely than men treated in the ED to need hospitalization. The study, published in the Annals of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology, the scientific publication of the American College of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology (ACAAI), looked at the sex differences in patient characteristics, and risk of hospitalizations ...

Bystander CPR helps cardiac arrest survivors return to work

2015-05-04
DALLAS, May 4, 2015 -- More bystanders performing CPR contributed to more cardiac arrest survivors returning to work in a Danish study published in the American Heart Association journal Circulation. In the largest study to date to examine return to work after cardiac arrest, researchers studied 4,354 patients in Denmark who were employed before they suffered out-of-hospital cardiac arrests between 2001 to 2011. Researchers found: More than 75 percent of survivors who had a cardiac arrest outside a hospital were capable of returning to work. Chances of returning ...

An unexpected role for calcium in controlling inflammation during chronic lung infection

2015-05-04
Many of us take a healthy immune system for granted. But for certain infants with rare, inherited mutations of certain genes, severe infection and death are stark consequences of their impaired immune responses. Now, researchers at NYU Langone Medical Center have identified an important role for calcium signaling in immune responses to chronic infection resulting from Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the bacterium causing tuberculosis (TB). Specifically, they determined that the immune systems in genetically altered mice lacking the critically important calcium channel ...

Primary care visits available to most uninsured, but at a high price

2015-05-04
Uninsured people don't have any more difficulty getting appointments with primary care doctors than those with insurance, but they get them at prices that are likely unaffordable to a typical uninsured person, according to new Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health-led research. And payment options are not very flexible, with only one in five people told they could be seen without paying the whole cost up front, suggests the new study published in the May issue of the journal Health Affairs. "There's a discouragement factor for uninsured people when it comes ...

New screening technique could pick up twice as many women with ovarian cancer

2015-05-04
A new screening method can detect twice as many women with ovarian cancer as conventional strategies, according to the latest results from the largest trial of its kind led by UCL. The method uses a statistical calculation to interpret changing levels in women's blood of a protein called CA125, which is linked to ovarian cancer. This gives a more accurate prediction of a woman's individual risk of developing cancer, compared to the conventional screening method which uses a fixed 'cut-off' point for CA125. The new method detected cancer in 86% of women with invasive epithelial ...

Racial differences in male breast cancer outcomes

2015-05-04
ATLANTA -- May 4, 2015 -- While black and white men under age 65 diagnosed with early-stage breast cancer received similar treatment, blacks had a 76% higher risk of death than whites, according to a new study. The study, published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology, found that the disparity was significantly reduced after accounting for differences in insurance and income. Male breast cancer is a rare disease, accounting for less than 1% of all cancers in men and approximately 2% of all breast cancers in the United States. Black men have a higher incidence of breast ...

How oxidizing a heart 'brake' causes heart damage

2015-05-04
Oxidative stress has been long known to fuel disease, but how exactly it damages various organs has been challenging to sort out. Now scientists from Johns Hopkins say research in mice reveals why oxidation comes to be so corrosive to heart muscle. A report on the results, published online May 4 in The Journal of Clinical Investigation, shows that oxidation inside the cardiac cells precipitates heart failure by disrupting the work of a heart-shielding protein called PKG, known to act as a natural "brake" against biological stressors like chronically elevated blood pressure, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

American College of Cardiology announces Fuster Prevention Forum

AAN issues new guideline for the management of functional seizures

Could GLP-1 drugs affect risk of epilepsy for people with diabetes?

New circoviruses discovered in pilot whales and orcas from the North Atlantic 

Study finds increase in risk of binge drinking among 12th graders who use 2 or more cannabis products

New paper-based technology could transform cancer drug testing

Opioids: clarifying the concept of safe supply to save lives

New species of tiny pumpkin toadlet discovered in Brazil highlights need for conservation in the mountain forests of Serra do Quiriri

Reciprocity matters--people were more supportive of climate policies in their country if they believed other countries were making significant efforts themselves

Stanford Medicine study shows why mRNA-based COVID-19 vaccines can cause myocarditis

Biobanking opens new windows into human evolution

Sky-high smoke

AI tips off scientists to new drug target to fight, treat mpox

USC researchers develop next-generation CAR T cells that show stronger, safer response in animal models

New study reveals Industrial Revolution’s uneven health impacts across England

Vine-inspired robotic gripper gently lifts heavy and fragile objects

Fingerprint of ancient seafarer found on Scandinavia’s oldest plank boat

Lunar soil analyses reveal how space weathering shapes the Moon’s ultraviolet reflectance

Einstein’s theory comes wrapped up with a bow: astronomers spot star “wobbling” around black hole

Danforth Plant Science Center to lead multi-disciplinary research to enhance stress resilience in bioenergy sorghum

Home-delivered groceries improve blood sugar control for people with diabetes facing food insecurity

MIT researchers identified three cognitive skills we use to infer what someone really means

The Iberian Peninsula is rotating clockwise according to new geodynamic data

SwRI, Trinity University to study stable bacterial proteins in search of medical advances

NIH-led study reveals role of mobile DNA elements in lung cancer progression

Stanford Medicine-led study identifies immune switch critical to autoimmunity, cancer

Research Alert: How the Immune System Stalls Weight Loss

Glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor agonist use and vertebral fracture risk in type 2 diabetes

Nonadherence to cervical cancer screening guidelines in commercially insured US adults

Contraception and castration linked to longer lifespan

[Press-News.org] New centimeter-accurate GPS system could transform virtual reality and mobile devices