Leggett, John2005-02-172017-04-072005-02-172017-04-072004-122005-02-17http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/1451Previous research from environmental psychology shows that human well-being suffers in windowless environments in many ways and a window view of nature is psychologically and physiologically beneficial to humans. Current window substitutes, still images and video, lack three dimensional properties necessary for a realistic viewing experience ? primarily motion parallax. We present a new system using a head-coupled display and image-based rendering to simulate a photorealistic artificial window view of nature with motion parallax. Evaluation data obtained from human subjects suggest that the system prototype is a better window substitute than a static image and has significantly more positive effects on observers? moods. The test subjects judged the system prototype as a good simulation of, and acceptable replacement for, a real window, and accorded it much higher ratings for realism and preference than a static image.en-USartificial windowwindowless environmentnature viewvirtual realityhuman well-beinghead-coupled displayimage-based renderingA true virtual windowBook