Publikation: Does Brief Exposure to a Self-avatar Effect Common Human Behaviors in Immersive Virtual Environments?
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A plausible assumption is that self-avatars increase the realism of immersive virtual environments (VEs), because self-avatars provide the user with a visual representation of his/her own body. Consequently having a self-avatar might lead to more realistic human behavior in VEs. To test this hypothesis we compared human behavior in VE with and without providing knowledge about a self-avatar with real human behavior in real-space. This comparison was made for three tasks: a locomotion task (moving through the content of the VE), an object interaction task (interacting with the content of the VE), and a social interaction task (interacting with other social entities within the VE). Surprisingly, we did not find effects of a self-avatar exposure on any of these tasks. However, participant s VE and real world behavior differed significantly. These results challenge the claim that knowledge about the self-avatar substantially influences natural human behavior in immersive VEs.
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STREUBER, Stephan, Stephan DE LA ROSA, Laura TRUTOIU, Heinrich H. BÜLTHOFF, Betty J. MOHLER, 2009. Does Brief Exposure to a Self-avatar Effect Common Human Behaviors in Immersive Virtual Environments?. Eurographics 2009 : the 30th Annual Conference of the European Association for Computer Graphics. Munich, Germany, 30. März 2009 - 3. Apr. 2009. In: ALLIEZ, Pierre, ed., Markus MAGNOR, ed.. Eurographics 2009 : Short Papers. Geneve: The Eurographics Association, 2009. Available under: doi: 10.2312/egs.20091042BibTex
@inproceedings{Streuber2009Brief-43311, year={2009}, doi={10.2312/egs.20091042}, title={Does Brief Exposure to a Self-avatar Effect Common Human Behaviors in Immersive Virtual Environments?}, publisher={The Eurographics Association}, address={Geneve}, booktitle={Eurographics 2009 : Short Papers}, editor={Alliez, Pierre and Magnor, Markus}, author={Streuber, Stephan and de la Rosa, Stephan and Trutoiu, Laura and Bülthoff, Heinrich H. and Mohler, Betty J.} }
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