DocumentCode
3027733
Title
Self-motion illusions in immersive virtual reality environments
Author
Bruder, Gerd ; Steinicke, Frank ; Wieland, Phil
Author_Institution
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Univ. of Munster, Münster, Germany
fYear
2011
fDate
19-23 March 2011
Firstpage
39
Lastpage
46
Abstract
Motion perception in immersive virtual reality environments significantly differs from the real world. For example, previous work has shown that users tend to underestimate travel distances in immersive virtual environments (VEs). As a solution to this problem, some researchers propose to scale the mapped virtual camera motion relative to the tracked real-world movement of a user until real and virtual motion appear to match, i. e., real-world movements could be mapped with a larger gain to the VE in order to compensate for the underestimation. Although this approach usually results in more accurate self-motion judgments by users, introducing discrepancies between real and virtual motion can become a problem, in particular, due to misalignments of both worlds and distorted space cognition. In this paper we describe a different approach that introduces apparent self-motion illusions by manipulating optic flow fields during movements in VEs. These manipulations can affect self-motion perception in VEs, but omit a quantitative discrepancy between real and virtual motions. We introduce four illusions and show in experiments that optic flow manipulation can significantly affect users´ self-motion judgments. Furthermore, we show that with such manipulation of optic flow fields the underestimation of travel distances can be compensated.
Keywords
cameras; image sequences; motion estimation; virtual reality; visual perception; immersive virtual reality environments; mapped virtual camera motion; motion perception; optic flow field manipulation; self-motion illusions; self-motion judgment; tracked real-world movement; travel distance underestimation; virtual motion; Blindness; Cameras; Detectors; Integrated optics; Optical distortion; Optical sensors; Visualization; Self-motion perception; optic flow; visual illusions;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Virtual Reality Conference (VR), 2011 IEEE
Conference_Location
Singapore
ISSN
1087-8270
Print_ISBN
978-1-4577-0039-2
Electronic_ISBN
1087-8270
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/VR.2011.5759434
Filename
5759434
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