论文标题
身体缩放效果及其对物理的影响
The Body Scaling Effect and Its Impact on Physics Plausibility
论文作者
论文摘要
在这项研究中,我们研究了基于人体所有权的身体缩放对虚拟现实(VR)物理合理性的影响。我们的兴趣是研究基于身体幻觉的身体缩放是否会影响刚体动态的合理性,类似于通过操纵其虚拟的腹部距离和观点高度来改变VR用户的规模。该程序涉及两项先前研究的概念复制。在两个条件下,我们研究了40名参与者的物理学合理性。在我们的同步条件下,我们使用Visuo-Tactile刺激引起了居住在检查桌上的参与者的居住的人体所有权的幻想。我们的异步状况与众不同,但异步提供了Visuo-Tactile刺激,以防止人体所有权幻觉的发作。我们对物理(真正的物理学)的正确近似值或物理学的正确近似感兴趣,而物理学是不正确的,并且看起来像是大于五倍的环境(电影物理学)对参与者而言似乎更现实,这是身体尺度的函数。我们发现,在人体所有权幻觉条件下,电影物理学对参与者的确看起来更现实。但是,我们的假设是,在异步条件下,真正的物理学将看起来更现实。我们的探索性分析表明,在这两种情况下,电影物理学都被认为是合理的。此外,我们无法从文献中复制有关对象大小估计的先前发现,同时居住在一个小的无形身体中。但是,我们发现尺寸估计有显着相反的效果。与异步条件相比,在同步视觉触觉条件下,物体大小平均被低估了。
In this study we investigated the effect of body ownership illusion-based body scaling on physics plausibility in Virtual Reality (VR). Our interest was in examining whether body ownership illusion-based body scaling could affect the plausibility of rigid body dynamics similarly to altering VR users' scale by manipulating their virtual interpupillary distance and viewpoint height. The procedure involved the conceptual replication of two previous studies. We investigated physics plausibility with 40 participants under two conditions. In our synchronous condition, we used visuo-tactile stimuli to elicit a body ownership illusion of inhabiting an invisible doll-sized body on participants reclining on an exam table. Our asynchronous condition was otherwise similar, but the visuo-tactile stimuli were provided asynchronously to prevent the onset of the body ownership illusion. We were interested in whether the correct approximation of physics (true physics) or physics that are incorrect and appearing as if the environment is five times larger instead (movie physics) appear more realistic to participants as a function of body scale. We found that movie physics did appear more realistic to participants under the body ownership illusion condition. However, our hypothesis that true physics would appear more realistic in the asynchronous condition was unsupported. Our exploratory analyses revealed that movie physics were perceived as plausible under both conditions. Moreover, we were not able to replicate previous findings from literature concerning object size estimations while inhabiting a small invisible body. However, we found a significant opposite effect regarding size estimations; the object sizes were on average underestimated during the synchronous visuo-tactile condition when compared to the asynchronous condition.