Analysis of Improvement Potentials in Current Virtual Reality Applications by Using Different Ways of Locomotion

Natalie Horvath, Sandra Pfiel, Florian Tiefenbacher, René Schuster, Michael Reiner

Publikation: Beitrag in Buch/Bericht/KonferenzbandKonferenzbeitragBegutachtung

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.

OriginalspracheEnglisch
TitelSystems, Software and Services Process Improvement - 27th European Conference, EuroSPI 2020, Proceedings
Redakteure/-innenMurat Yilmaz, Paul Clarke, Jörg Niemann, Richard Messnarz
Herausgeber (Verlag)Springer
Seiten807-819
Seitenumfang13
Band1251
ISBN (Print)9783030564407
DOIs
PublikationsstatusVeröffentlicht - 10 Aug. 2020

Publikationsreihe

NameCommunications in Computer and Information Science
Band1251 CCIS
ISSN (Print)1865-0929
ISSN (elektronisch)1865-0937

Forschungsfelder

  • Virtual Reality
  • Virtual Training

IMC Forschungsschwerpunkte

  • Digital transformation and organisational development

ÖFOS 2012 - Österreichischen Systematik der Wissenschaftszweige

  • 102026 Virtual Reality

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