DocumentCode :
2032882
Title :
Effects of travel technique and gender on a divided attention task in a virtual environment
Author :
Suma, Evan A. ; Finkelstein, Samantha L. ; Clark, Seth ; Goolkasian, Paula ; Hodges, Larry F.
Author_Institution :
Univ. of North Carolina at Charlotte, Charlotte, NC, USA
fYear :
2010
fDate :
20-21 March 2010
Firstpage :
27
Lastpage :
34
Abstract :
We report a user study which compared four virtual environment travel techniques using a divided attention task. Participants used either real walking, gaze-directed, pointing-directed, or torso-directed travel to follow a target through an environment while simultaneously responding to auditory stimuli. In addition to travel technique, we investigated gender as a between-subjects variable and task difficulty (simple or complex) and task type (single or divided) as within-subjects variables. Real walking allowed superior performance over the pointing-directed technique on measures of navigation task performance and recognition of stimuli presented during navigation. This indicates that participants using real walking may have had more spare cognitive capacity to process and encode stimuli than those using pointing-directed travel. We also found a gender-difficulty interaction where males performed worse and responded slower to the attention task when the spatial task was more difficult, but no differences were observed for females between difficulty levels. While these results may be pertinent for the design of virtual environments, the nature and goal of the virtual environment tasks must be carefully considered to determine whether similar effects on performance can be expected under different conditions.
Keywords :
computerised navigation; user interfaces; virtual reality; auditory stimuli; divided attention task; gaze-directed travel; gender-difficulty interaction; pointing-directed technique; real walking; torso-directed travel; travel technique; virtual environment; Humans; Multimedia systems; Navigation; User centered design; Vehicle driving; Virtual environment; Virtual reality; Wire; locomotion; navigation; user study; virtual environments;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
3D User Interfaces (3DUI), 2010 IEEE Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Waltham, MA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-6846-1
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4244-6845-4
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/3DUI.2010.5444726
Filename :
5444726
Link To Document :
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