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Take a Look Around – The Impact of Decoupling Gaze and Travel-direction in Seated and Ground-based Virtual Reality Utilizing Torso-directed Steering

Daniel Zielasko, Yuen C. Law, Benjamin Weyers

20202020 IEEE Conference on Virtual Reality and 3D User Interfaces (VR)39 citationsDOI

Abstract

Leaning (the upper body) has several times been shown to be a suitable virtual travel technique when being seated; in both, flying as well as ground-based scenarios. The direction of the steering method most commonly used is gaze/head-directed. However, this does not allow to inspect the environment independently from the direction of movement. The change to torso-directed steering allows for the latter and additionally does not take anything from the natural character of the leaning metaphor. We empirically investigated the impact of this freedom in a ground-based scenario and complemented the conditions with a virtual body-directed method and then crossed all with device-based control conditions. In the conducted study (n = 25), we found the torso-directed methods objectively performed the best (traveled distance, completion time & number of collisions), and found torso-directed leaning subjectively rated the most usable one.

Topics & Concepts

TorsoGazeDecoupling (probability)Computer scienceVirtual realitySimulationHuman–computer interactionUSableGround truthComputer visionArtificial intelligenceEngineeringControl engineeringWorld Wide WebMedicineAnatomyVirtual Reality Applications and ImpactsSpatial Cognition and NavigationHuman-Automation Interaction and Safety
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