Publication | Closed Access
Does a Gradual Transition to the Virtual World increase Presence?
66
Citations
27
References
2009
Year
Unknown Venue
EngineeringCommunicationVirtual HumanGradual TransitionPsychologyArtificial EnvironmentVirtual RealityImmersive TechnologyAffective ComputingGame DesignCognitive ScienceBehavioral SciencesUser ExperienceIntelligent Virtual EnvironmentCollaborative Virtual EnvironmentMulti-user VrPerformance StudiesVirtual WorldsSocial ComputingVirtual SpaceHuman-computer InteractionPhysical SpaceArts
In order to increase a user's sense of presence in an artificial environment some researchers propose a gradual transition from reality to the virtual world instead of immersing users into the virtual world directly. One approach is to start the VR experience in a virtual replica of the physical space to accustom users to the characteristics of VR, e.g., latency, reduced field of view or tracking errors, in a known environment. Although this procedure is already applied in VR demonstrations, until now it has not been verified whether the usage of such a transitional environment - as transition between real and virtual environment - increases someone's sense of presence. We have observed subjective, physiological and behavioral reactions of subjects during a fully-immersive flight phobia experiment under two different conditions: the virtual flight environment was displayed immediately, or subjects visited a transitional environment before entering the virtual flight environment. We have quantified to what extent a gradual transition to the VE via a transitional environment increases the level of presence. We have found that subjective responses show significantly higher scores for the user's sense of presence, and that subjects' behavioral reactions change when a transitional environment is shown first. Considering physiological reactions, no significant difference could be found.
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