What the study found
The paper presents a dual-screen architecture in which 55,000 spectators wear individual AR scouters for personal immersion while also watching a massive stadium screen showing the same virtual battle. The author describes this paired setup as a complete structural blueprint for what is called the dual-layer civilization.
Why the authors say this matters
The study suggests that the personal immersion layer and the collective resonance layer together generate resonance value that neither layer can produce alone. The authors conclude that this dual-screen design is the critical architectural element completing the vision.
What the researchers tested
This is a version 2.0 of the Tokyo Dome Vision paper. The abstract says the giant stadium screen was added as the collective resonance layer, alongside the AR scouter-based personal immersion layer, to form the full dual-layer design.
What worked and what didn't
The abstract states that the complete vision combines both layers into one structure and that the combination generates resonance value. It does not report comparative tests, measurements, or any elements that did not work.
What to keep in mind
The available summary does not describe a study design, data collection, or evaluation criteria. It also does not provide evidence, limitations, or independent validation beyond the author's description.
Key points
- The paper describes a dual-screen setup with AR scouters and a giant stadium screen.
- The author says the two layers together generate resonance value that neither can produce alone.
- The abstract frames the design as a complete blueprint for a dual-layer civilization.
- The version 2.0 paper adds the stadium screen as the collective resonance layer.
- No tests, measurements, or limitations are described in the abstract.
Disclosure
- Research title:
- Dual-screen AR architecture is presented as a complete structural blueprint
- Image credit:
- Photo by Franco Monsalvo on Pexels
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