Virtual Reality and its potential for evaluating warning compliance

Behavioral compliance is usually considered the best measure of warning effectiveness. Researching behavioral effects is difficult to carry out, however, due to concerns for safety, ethics, and high costs. Researchers cannot expose participants to real hazards while conducting a research. A realisti...

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Veröffentlicht in:Human factors and ergonomics in manufacturing & service industries 2010-11, Vol.20 (6), p.526-537
Hauptverfasser: Duarte, Emília, Rebelo, Francisco, Wogalter, Michael S.
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container_end_page 537
container_issue 6
container_start_page 526
container_title Human factors and ergonomics in manufacturing & service industries
container_volume 20
creator Duarte, Emília
Rebelo, Francisco
Wogalter, Michael S.
description Behavioral compliance is usually considered the best measure of warning effectiveness. Researching behavioral effects is difficult to carry out, however, due to concerns for safety, ethics, and high costs. Researchers cannot expose participants to real hazards while conducting a research. A realistic scenario that appears risky but that actually has no risk is expensive to conduct in terms of money, time, and effort. This article reflects on the potential of Virtual Reality (VR) as a technique to investigate warning effectiveness, particularly behavioral compliance. VR may help to overcome several key constraints that have limited warning compliance research, such as hazards actually being manipulated. This article focuses on two information‐processing stages that will most likely benefit from VR: attention and behavior. Increasingly realistic VR can provide high‐quality Virtual Environments (VEs) for use in warnings research. VEs can provide ecological validity and experimental control while limiting actual physical harm. Advantages and limitations are reviewed. © 2010 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
doi_str_mv 10.1002/hfm.20242
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source Wiley Online Library All Journals
subjects Behavior
Compliance
Effectiveness evaluation
Ergonomics
Ethics
Human factors
Human factors research
Methodology
Occupational hazards
Reviews
Virtual Reality
Warnings
title Virtual Reality and its potential for evaluating warning compliance
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