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Virtual reality for law enforcement training: a demonstration and implication for dispatch priming

Jason Potts, Angela Hawken, Maureen Hillhouse, David Farabee

2022Police Practice and Research12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

We conducted an experimental evaluation of virtual training experiences (VTE) for law-enforcement training during an international policing conference (American Society of Evidence Based Policing). Among the volunteers (N = 77), 30% were female and 70% males with 49% employed in law enforcement and 51% in other occupations. Participants were outfitted with a controller gun, holster, and a virtual-reality headset. Each of four scenarios used involved a call for service reporting the presence of an unknown man acting strangely, with random assignment to one of four conditions: priming message (yes, no) and instrument held by suspect (gun, cellphone). Results show no significant effect of dispatch priming on participants’ responses but do show that law-enforcement officers made more accurate decisions than did non-law-enforcement participants. The feasibility and potential usefulness of VTE as a training tool is discussed along with recommendations for future policing studies involving VR.

Topics & Concepts

Law enforcementSuspectHeadsetPriming (agriculture)EnforcementLawPsychologyVirtual realityService (business)Training (meteorology)Computer securityPolitical scienceComputer scienceApplied psychologyBusinessHuman–computer interactionMarketingMeteorologyPhysicsBiologyGerminationBotanyTelecommunicationsVirtual Reality Applications and ImpactsPolicing Practices and PerceptionsHuman-Automation Interaction and Safety