@inproceedings{f3bf59a61eb74425a72bd67009f6f8f9,
title = "Analysis of Improvement Potentials in Current Virtual Reality Applications by Using Different Ways of Locomotion",
abstract = "It has become common knowledge that the use of virtual reality (VR) applications can very often cause typical symptoms of motion sickness such as nausea and dizziness. For this reason, however, there are also more and more attempts to contain or completely avoid the side effect, which is meanwhile called cybersickness. This paper elaborates on a pre-study of a large-scale study investigating whether the use of treadmills for real, physical movement in virtual worlds can reduce the incidence of motion sickness compared to other common VR locomotion techniques and therefore enlarge the time participants can use VR for training or simulation in companies.",
keywords = "Improvement, Motion sickness, OmniDeck, Virtual locomotion techniques, Virtual reality, VR training",
author = "Natalie Horvath and Sandra Pfiel and Florian Tiefenbacher and Ren{\'e} Schuster and Michael Reiner",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2020, Springer Nature Switzerland AG.",
year = "2020",
month = aug,
day = "10",
doi = "10.1007/978-3-030-56441-4_61",
language = "English",
isbn = "9783030564407",
volume = "1251",
series = "Communications in Computer and Information Science",
publisher = "Springer",
pages = "807--819",
editor = "Murat Yilmaz and Paul Clarke and J{\"o}rg Niemann and Richard Messnarz",
booktitle = "Systems, Software and Services Process Improvement - 27th European Conference, EuroSPI 2020, Proceedings",
address = "Germany",
}