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Psychophysiology to Assess Impact of Varying Levels of Simulation Fidelity in a Threat Environment
Author(s) -
Thomas D. Parsons,
Albert Rizzo,
Christopher G. Courtney,
Michael E. Dawson
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
advances in human-computer interaction
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.429
H-Index - 21
eISSN - 1687-5907
pISSN - 1687-5893
DOI - 10.1155/2012/831959
Subject(s) - simulator sickness , fidelity , arousal , psychophysiology , feeling , psychology , virtual machine , virtual reality , sense of presence , stimulus (psychology) , cognitive psychology , sensory system , human–computer interaction , applied psychology , social psychology , computer science , telecommunications , neuroscience , operating system
There are many virtual environments found in the serious game community that simulate real world scenarios. There is a broad range of fidelity and experimental controls among these serious games. An important component to most evaluations is the extent to which level of fidelity impacts the persons immersed in the serious game. While a great deal of virtual environment and serious game research has assessed the subjective state or feeling of the participant (e.g., the participant’s sense of presence) through the use of questionnaires, the current study examines participant experience by examining psychophysiological responses of participants to their surroundings. The primary goal in this study was evaluative: will a virtual environment with arousing contents result in increased sensory arousal if it is presented in a highly immersive configuration? A secondary goal of this study was to investigate the utility of our environment to offer varying levels of stimulus threat to impact the user’s experience of the virtual environment. Increased simulation fidelity in an arousing environment resulted in faster heart rates and increased startle eyeblink amplitudes, suggesting that higher fidelity scenarios had great efficacy related to sensory arousal

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