KAUST students Daniya Boges and Dr. Corrado Calì developed an AR tool for medical applications, leading to the startup IntraVides. The project was supported by KAUST's Smart Health Initiative, which provided access to AR/VR facilities and seed funding through the KAUST Innovation Fund. The KAUST Entrepreneurship Center also helped incubate the idea from concept to business. Why it matters: This highlights KAUST's role in fostering innovation and entrepreneurship in healthcare through strategic investments in advanced technology and dedicated support programs.
The article discusses immersive analytics, which uses VR and AR to visualize data in 3D and embed it into the user's environment, and reviews systems and techniques from the Data Visualisation and Immersive Analytics lab at Monash University. It explores the concept of "embodied sensemaking" and its potential to improve how people work with complex data. Professor Tim Dwyer directs the Data Visualisation and Immersive Analytics Lab at Monash University. Why it matters: Immersive analytics could significantly enhance data comprehension and decision-making across various sectors in the Middle East, where large-scale projects and smart city initiatives generate vast datasets.
KAUST alumnus Ronell Sicat (M.S. '10, Ph.D. '15) is developing immersive data visualization tools using augmented and virtual reality (AR/VR). After a postdoc at Harvard, Sicat returned to KAUST as a research scientist in the Visual Computing Center. Sicat developed a tool called DXR to help researchers prototype immersive visualizations. Why it matters: This highlights KAUST's role in fostering talent and innovation in AR/VR, a growing area with applications across various sectors in Saudi Arabia.
The Autonomous Robotics Research Center (ARRC) is developing underwater communication systems, including a multimode modem prototype, and has filed three patents. One key technology is the Universal Underwater Software Defined Modem (UniSDM), which supports sound, magnetic induction, light, and radio waves. ARRC also developed a network management framework for automatic network slicing (ANS) of communication resources. Why it matters: These advancements are crucial for improving underwater exploration, industrial maintenance, and marine monitoring in the region, enabling more efficient and reliable communication for underwater robots.
This article discusses the evolution of mobile extended reality (MEX) and its potential to revolutionize urban interaction. It highlights the convergence of augmented and virtual reality technologies for mobile usage. A novel approach to 3D models, characterized as urban situated models or “3D-plus-time” (4D.City), is introduced. Why it matters: The development of MEX and 4D.City could significantly enhance user experience and analog-digital convergence in urban environments, offering new possibilities for human-computer interaction.
MBZUAI researchers introduce ARB, the first comprehensive benchmark for evaluating step-by-step multimodal reasoning in Arabic across textual and visual modalities. The benchmark spans 11 diverse domains and includes 1,356 multimodal samples with 5,119 human-curated reasoning steps. Evaluations of 12 state-of-the-art LMMs revealed challenges in coherence, faithfulness, and cultural grounding, highlighting the need for culturally aware AI systems.
Eyal Ofek of Microsoft Research is researching how to augment users' senses and use scene understanding to create more inclusive workspaces, especially for remote work. His work involves designing applications flexible to changing environments and personalized to each user. Ofek's background includes computer vision, augmented reality, and leading research groups at Microsoft. Why it matters: This research aims to improve remote collaboration and adapt technology to individual user needs, which could enhance productivity and inclusivity in the evolving work landscape of the GCC region.
A research paper by Fatima Al Nuaimi, Dr. Pietro Tedeschi, and Dr. Enrico Natalizio from the Autonomous Robotics Research Center (ARRC) has been published in IEEE Transactions on Industrial Informatics. The paper, titled “Privacy-Aware Remote Identification for Unmanned Aerial Vehicles: Current Solutions, Potential Threats, and Future Directions”, examines vulnerabilities in UAV Remote ID systems. It identifies challenges for industry and academia in enhancing UAV security and privacy. Why it matters: The research highlights critical security and privacy considerations for the rapidly growing UAV sector in the region and globally.