This year, Prof. Dr. Jan Bauer from Karlsruhe University of Applied Sciences took over the chair of the electronic displays Conference from Prof. Dr. Karlheinz Blankenbach, who shaped the event for many years with great expertise and commitment. The seamless transition underscores the strong scientific foundation of the conference and ensures its continued development in a dynamic market environment. Prof. Bauer is building on the successful work of his predecessor and providing new impetus to further expand the conference's importance as a leading platform for the display community.
“As the new Chairman of the electronic displays Conference, I am particularly pleased with the depth of content in the presentations and the intensive professional exchange within our community. Many contributions have shown that display technologies are currently undergoing gradual development – new momentum is emerging, particularly in energy-efficient low-power displays and sustainability, which will play a central role in the future of the industry,” says Chairman Bauer.
Automotive UX & Cockpit Interaction
A1 – Automotive UX Foundations
A2 – Touch, Interaction & Safe Input in the Cockpit
Business Strategy & Supply Chain
B1 – Markets & Supply Chain
Hardware Performance, Materials & Production
T1 – Manufacturing & Process Innovation
T2 – Backlight, Local Dimming & Picture Quality
T3 – Display Materials & Optical Chemistry
Metrology, Legibility & Testing
M1 – Metrology & Measurement for Display Quality
M2 – Evaluation & Legibility in Automotive
M3 – Robotics & AI for Display QA
IVI Connectivity & System Architectures
C1 – Video Links & Open Standard Architectures
C2 – Zonal IVI Architectures & High-Speed Links
Market, Sustainability Strategy & Product Practice
S1 – Sustainability Strategy & Metrics
S2 – Sustainability in Practice
Low-Power & Retail Displays
Z1 – Zero-/Low-Power & Retail E-Paper
XR & AR Display Systems
XR1 – XR & AR Displays
The Best Poster Award went to Lukas Eger from Pforzheim University.
He presented his poster on the topic ‘The Helmholtz-Kohlrausch Effect: A Comparison of Perceived Brightness vs. Measured Luminance for Modern Display Technologies’.