Frontal extents in virtual environments are not immune to underperception

Distance is commonly underperceived by up to 50 % in virtual environments (VEs), in contrast to relatively accurate real world judgments. Experiments reported by Geuss, Stefanucci, Creem-Regehr, and Thompson ( Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 38 , 1242-1253, 2012...

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Veröffentlicht in:Attention, perception & psychophysics perception & psychophysics, 2015-08, Vol.77 (6), p.1848-1853
Hauptverfasser: Kelly, Jonathan W., Hammel, William, Sjolund, Lori A., Siegel, Zachary D.
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container_issue 6
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container_title Attention, perception & psychophysics
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creator Kelly, Jonathan W.
Hammel, William
Sjolund, Lori A.
Siegel, Zachary D.
description Distance is commonly underperceived by up to 50 % in virtual environments (VEs), in contrast to relatively accurate real world judgments. Experiments reported by Geuss, Stefanucci, Creem-Regehr, and Thompson ( Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 38 , 1242-1253, 2012) indicate that the exocentric distance separating two objects in a VE is underperceived when the objects are oriented in the sagittal plane (depth extents), but veridically perceived when oriented in a frontoparallel plane (frontal extents). The authors conclude that “distance underestimation in the [VE] generalizes to intervals in the depth plane, but not to intervals in the frontal plane.” The current experiment evaluated an alternative hypothesis that the accurate judgments of frontal extents reported by Geuss et al. were due to a fortunate balance of underperception caused by the VE and overperception of frontal relative to depth extents. Participants judged frontal and depth extents in the classroom VE used by Geuss et al. and in a sparser VE containing only a grass-covered ground plane. Judgments in the classroom VE replicated findings by Geuss et al., but judgments in the grass VE show underperception of both depth and frontal extents, indicating that frontal extents are not immune to underperception in VEs.
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source MEDLINE; Springer Journals; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Adult
Behavioral Science and Psychology
Cognitive Psychology
Distance Perception
Experiments
Humans
Hypotheses
Judgment
Laboratories
Pantomime
Perceptions
Psychology
Studies
Undergraduate Students
User-Computer Interface
Virtual Classrooms
title Frontal extents in virtual environments are not immune to underperception
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