重复动作干预自我化身对自我个性感的影响

T. Inamura, Shin'ichiro Eitoku, I. Toshima, Shinya Shimizu, A. Fukayama, S. Ozawa, Takao Nakamura
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引用次数: 0

摘要

近年来,人类数字孪生作为一种新技术被讨论。当我们讨论一个人的自我化身在网络空间中自主地进行社交活动时,问题就出现了,化身的行为是否像我们自己的行为,以及我们是否可以认可自我化身代表我们自己进行的社交活动。我们把这种感觉定义为自我个性的感觉。本研究以自我化身为主体进行自我呈现的情境为研究对象,探讨自我化身呈现动作的修饰体验对自我个性感的影响。我们进行了基于虚拟现实的实验,其中24名实验参与者在8周的时间里对自我化身进行了动作修改干预。结果,我们发现自我个性感随着修改和干预次数的增加而提高。然而,我们发现在这个实验条件下,运动修饰的强度与自我个性感的提高并不相关。我们还发现,当其他人介入运动时,自我个性感会降低。从这些结果中,我们阐明了在设计人类数字孪生中代表我们自己的化身行为时,自我化身的运动修改经验是重要的。需要进一步的研究来澄清长期干预对行为的影响,以区分单纯的暴露效应。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Effect of repetitive motion intervention on self-avatar on the sense of self-individuality
In recent years, the human Digital Twin has been discussed as new technology. When we discuss a world in which one’s self-avatar autonomously performs social activities in cyberspace, the questions arise whether or not the behavior of the avatars feels like one’s own, and whether or not we can approve of the self-avatars’ social activities on behalf of ourselves. We define such feeling as the sense of self-individuality. In this study, we focused on the situation in which self-avatars perform presentations on behalf of ourselves to investigate the effect of the modification experience on the presentation motions by self-avatars on the sense of self-individuality. We conducted VR-based experiments in which the motion modification intervention was performed on self-avatars over eight weeks by 24 experiment participants. As a result, we found that the sense of self-individuality was improved as the number of modifications and interventions increased. However, we found that the intensity of motion modification did not correlate with the improvement of the sense of self-individuality in this experiment condition. We also found that the sense of self-individuality was reduced when others intervened in the motion. From these results, we clarified that the experience of motion modification on self-avatars is significant when designing the behavior of avatars acting on behalf of ourselves in human Digital Twin. Further investigation is required to clarify the effect of the long-term intervention on behavior to distinguish between the mere exposure effect.
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