Some Experimental Results of Relieving Discomfort in Virtual Reality by Disturbing Feedback Loop in Human Brain

March 19, 2019 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› arXiv.org

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Authors Wei Qionghua, Wang Hui, Wei Qiang arXiv ID 1903.12617 Category cs.HC: Human-Computer Interaction Citations 6 Venue arXiv.org Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
Recently, great progress has been made in virtual reality(VR) research and application. However, virtual reality faces a big problem since its appearance, i.e. discomfort (nausea, stomach awareness, etc). Discomfort can be relieved by increasing hardware (sensor, cpu and display) speed. But this will increase cost. This paper gives another low cost solution. The phenomenon of cybersickness is explained with the control theory: discomfort arises if feedback scene differs from expectation, so it can be relieved by disturbing feedback loop in human brain. A hardware platform is build to test this explanation. The VR display on a Samsung S6 is blurred while head movement is detected. The effect is evaluated by comparing responses to the Simulated Sickness Questionnaire (SSQ) between a control and experimental condition. Experimental results show that the new method can ease discomfort remarkably with little extra cost. As a result, VR may be used more widely in teaching (like foreign language, medicine). It's also reasonable to expect likewise merits in other VR applications.
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