Paper
1 September 1975 Computer Generation Of Images The Multi-Purpose Tool
W.Marvin Bunker
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Simulated images have been used for training for at least thirty years. This has included simulation of visual scenes and of displays from various sensor systems such as radar, sonar, infrared, and television cameras. Techniques used have included scale models, acoustic tanks, and photography. Increasingly through the years, analog and digital computation equipment has been used along with these techniques for control and modification of results. In the early sixties, the increasing power of digital computation and data processing circuitry led to consideration of systems in which the "environment" hills, targets, buildings, etc. exists only as stored numbers, and images are generated in real time by appropriate computations performed on these numbers. Such approaches promised many advantages as compared with traditional techniques. Continuous effort has been applied since that time to develop algorithms, overcome disadvantages, improve performance, and reduce cost. The results: extremely realistic systems are now in operation. Recent radar simulation systems are based on computed displays. Visual scene simulation is proving itself on several operating systems. These have been combined in correlated multi-mode displays. Development is under way to apply this technology to simulation of displays from other sensors.
© (1975) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
W.Marvin Bunker "Computer Generation Of Images The Multi-Purpose Tool", Proc. SPIE 0059, Simulators and Simulation II: Design, Applications and Techniques, (1 September 1975); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.954353
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Cited by 1 scholarly publication.
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KEYWORDS
Radar

Computer simulations

Visualization

Systems modeling

Video

Reflectivity

Scene simulation

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