MONKEYmedia Tackles Virtual Reality Motion Sickness with Launch of Transformative Body-Based Navigation Technology

BodyNav leverages the existing on-board sensors of smartphones and advanced 3D headsets in novel and unanticipated ways to engage the body’s innate center of gravity.

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Feb. 6, 2018 13:00 UTC

MONKEYmedia® Tackles Virtual Reality Motion Sickness with Launch of Transformative Body-Based Navigation Technology

Patented solution uses natural body movement to reduce sensory imbalances and offer higher-quality VR, AR and FPV drone piloting experiences

AUSTIN, Texas--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- MONKEYmedia, Inc., an independent R&D lab with a 25-year track record of developing award-winning, user-friendly technology experiences, today announced the launch of its patented body-based navigation solution (BodyNav™) for hands-free virtual reality interactions. BodyNav leverages the existing on-board sensors of smartphones and advanced 3D headsets in novel and unanticipated ways to engage the body’s innate center of gravity. This human-centered interaction approach reduces motion sickness artifacts and enhances navigation abilities in virtual and augmented realities (VR/AR), as well as first-person view (FPV) drone aviation contexts.

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Without any custom hardware, BodyNav uses distinct sensor axes for independent functions to maintain ...

Without any custom hardware, BodyNav uses distinct sensor axes for independent functions to maintain equilibrium in the body’s proprioceptive system. Viewers simply lean, using either their head or torso, to move themselves through virtual spaces, or to move their drones through remote physical spaces. This allows the sensory receptors, which receive stimuli internally and relate to the body’s position and movement, to properly engage with virtual or remote content, synchronizing visual and vestibular senses and reducing motion sickness-inducing factors. (Photo: Business Wire)

Rob Bamforth, Principal Analyst at research and analysis company Quocirca, explains that “making the physical experience align with human expectations, as I experienced with MONKEYmedia’s BodyNav technology, is critical not only for an effective VR experience, but also for avoiding digitally induced motion sickness.”

The Motion Sickness Challenge

Motion sickness has long been a complaint amongst virtual reality gamers and drone pilots. Traditional stereoscopic headset interfaces use multiple sensor axes (e.g. rotate left/right, pivot up/down, tip left/right) to establish viewer orientation, while requiring handheld controllers (e.g., joysticks, gamepads, keyboards, etc.) for locomotion. Visually “moving” through space while in a sedentary posture creates sensory imbalances that can cause dizziness and nausea in the viewer. Oculus’ former Chief Scientist goes so far as to call hand controllers “sickness generators.” Addressing this problem, MONKEYmedia’s patented, hands-free BodyNav technology creates more intuitive virtual interactions by remapping control axes to accomplish both orientation and locomotion with natural body movement. This provides the organic equilibrium needed to circumvent sensory imbalances.

“Fundamentally, MONKEYmedia has solved a really important problem within the VR community,” said Richard Garriott de Cayeux, legendary video game pioneer and private astronaut. BodyNav “doesn’t require a joystick and you don’t get motion sickness. It has a very natural feel and seems to solve vestibular dysfunction. An outstanding solution.”

How BodyNav Works

Without any custom hardware, BodyNav uses distinct sensor axes for independent functions to maintain equilibrium in the body’s proprioceptive system. Viewers simply lean, using either their head or torso, to move themselves through virtual spaces, or to move their drones through remote physical spaces. This allows the sensory receptors, which receive stimuli internally and relate to the body’s position and movement, to properly engage with virtual or remote content, synchronizing visual and vestibular senses and reducing motion sickness-inducing factors.

“MONKEYmedia has been on the forefront of interface design and invention since the first wave of VR innovation in the early ’90s, and we’ve learned that motion sickness in VR has more to do with human interaction than raw hardware capabilities,” said Eric Bear, co-founder of MONKEYmedia and co-inventor of BodyNav. “The launch of BodyNav comes after more than 20 years of experimental research and development. The resulting technology creates a sense of agency in viewers that fosters deeper connections with content, characters and 3D data. We’re excited to open doors for developers to provide more enjoyable and inspiring experiences to consumers in a variety of contexts.”

Use Cases

BodyNav can be readily adapted to modernize a user experience with just a few lines of code. For developers like Garriott, it enhances first-person gaming by freeing the hands from managing avatar movement to focus on other tasks. It will also amplify multi-camera performances and sporting events, control of remote vehicles, video conferencing and telepresence applications, street-view maps, augmented reality, architectural simulations, and 3D user interfaces for browsing data models, documents and images – all while keeping users comfortable, engaged and entertained. For more information about how to incorporate BodyNav technology into a VR or drone piloting user experience, please contact bodynav@monkey.com.

MONKEYmedia’s BodyNav technology powers its recently released iPhone apps, Walk-in Theater™ (a new cinematic video format featuring works of famous artists), Teleport™ (an immersive drone piloting experience) and BodyNav™ (a fun VR game that challenges player performance against the clock). A limited-time promotional bundle of all three apps is available for 99¢ in the App Store at https://itunes.apple.com/us/developer/monkeymedia/id549884157/.

About MONKEYmedia

MONKEYmedia, Inc. is an award-winning, independent R&D lab committed to user-friendly technology experiences. As first-named inventors on more than 100 user experience patents and apps, founders Eric and Janna Bear have challenged “what is” with “what could be” for several decades. MONKEYmedia’s patent portfolio includes in-house inventions that date back to 1992 and are incorporated into over 184 million movies distributed on DVD & Blu-ray. Licensees to its various inventions include the largest consumer electronics and operating system companies in the world, all of the major motion picture studios in the United States and other Fortune 500 industry players.

BodyNav, Walk-in Theater and Teleport are covered by US Patent 9,563,202, US Patent 9,579,586, US Patent 9,612,627, US Patent 9,656,168, US Patent 9,658,617, US Patent 9,782,684, US Patent 9,791,897, US Patent App 15/694,210 and other patents pending.

Copyright © 2018 MONKEYmedia, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Contacts

For MONKEYmedia, Inc.
Sara Lasseter, 817-559-2870
sara@ink-co.com

Source: MONKEYmedia, Inc.

Smart Multimedia Gallery

Without any custom hardware, BodyNav uses distinct sensor axes for independent functions to maintain equilibrium in the body’s proprioceptive system. Viewers simply lean, using either their head or torso, to move themselves through virtual spaces, or to move their drones through remote physical spaces. This allows the sensory receptors, which receive stimuli internally and relate to the body’s position and movement, to properly engage with virtual or remote content, synchronizing visual and vestibular senses and reducing motion sickness-inducing factors. (Photo: Business Wire)

View this news release and multimedia online at:
http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20180206005408/en

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