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The Effects of Body Tracking Fidelity on Embodiment of an Inverse-Kinematic Avatar for Male Participants

James Coleman Eubanks, Alec G. Moore, Paul A. Fishwick, Ryan P. McMahan

202044 citationsDOI

Abstract

Many research studies have investigated avatar embodiment and its effects on self-location, agency, and body ownership. Researchers have also investigated the effects of various external stimuli and avatar appearances during embodiment. However, the effects of body tracking fidelity while embodying an inverse-kinematic avatar are relatively unexplored. In this paper, we present two studies using a set of six trackers that investigate four levels of body tracking fidelity during avatar embodiment for male participants only: Complete (head, hands, feet, and pelvis trackers), Head-and-Extremities (head, hands, and feet trackers), Head-and-Hands (head and hands trackers), and No-Avatar (head and hands trackers; only controllers visible). Our results indicate that tracking the head, hands, and feet significantly increases the sense of embodiment and the sense of spatial presence when embodying an inverse-kinematic avatar for male participants.

Topics & Concepts

AvatarBitTorrent trackerKinematicsInverse kinematicsTracking (education)Head (geology)Computer scienceComputer visionArtificial intelligencePsychologyHuman–computer interactionEye trackingPhysicsRobotClassical mechanicsPedagogyGeologyGeomorphologyVirtual Reality Applications and ImpactsAction Observation and SynchronizationPsychology of Social Influence
The Effects of Body Tracking Fidelity on Embodiment of an Inverse-Kinematic Avatar for Male Participants | Litcius