Field-of-View Restriction to Reduce VR Sickness Does Not Impede Spatial Learning in Women

I. Adhanom, Majed Al-Zayer, P. MacNeilage, Eelke Folmer
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引用次数: 11

Abstract

Women are more likely to experience virtual reality (VR) sickness than men, which could pose a major challenge to the mass market success of VR. Because VR sickness often results from a visual-vestibular conflict, an effective strategy to mitigate conflict is to restrict the user’s field-of-view (FOV) during locomotion. Sex differences in spatial cognition have been well researched, with several studies reporting that men exhibit better spatial navigation performance in desktop three-dimensional environments than women. However, additional research suggests that this sex difference can be mitigated by providing a larger FOV as this increases the availability of landmarks, which women tend to rely on more than men. Though FOV restriction is already a widely used strategy for VR headsets to minimize VR sickness, it is currently not well understood if it impedes spatial learning in women due to decreased availability of landmarks. Our study (n=28, 14 men and 14 women) found that a dynamic FOV restrictor was equally effective in reducing VR sickness in both sexes, and no sex differences in VR sickness incidence were found. Our study did find a sex difference in spatial learning ability, but an FOV restrictor did not impede spatial learning in either sex.
减少VR疾病的视野限制不会阻碍女性的空间学习
女性比男性更容易对虚拟现实(VR)感到不适,这可能对VR在大众市场的成功构成重大挑战。由于VR疾病通常是由视觉-前庭冲突引起的,因此减轻冲突的有效策略是在运动过程中限制用户的视野(FOV)。空间认知的性别差异已经得到了很好的研究,有几项研究报告称,男性在桌面三维环境中表现出比女性更好的空间导航能力。然而,另一项研究表明,这种性别差异可以通过提供更大的视场来缓解,因为这增加了地标的可用性,而女性往往比男性更依赖地标。虽然FOV限制已经被广泛用于VR头戴设备,以减少VR疾病,但目前还不清楚它是否会因为地标性物的减少而阻碍女性的空间学习。我们的研究(n=28, 14名男性和14名女性)发现,动态FOV限制器在减少两性VR疾病方面同样有效,并且在VR疾病发病率方面没有发现性别差异。我们的研究确实发现了空间学习能力的性别差异,但视场限制并不妨碍男女的空间学习。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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