Higher Levels of Immersion Improve Procedure Memorization Performance

Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Date
2009
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
The Eurographics Association
Abstract
Researchers have proposed that immersion could have advantages for tasks involving abstract mental activities, such as conceptual learning; however, there are few empirical results that support this idea. We hypothesized that higher levels of immersion would benefit such tasks if the mental activity can be mapped to objects or locations in a 3D environment. To investigate this hypothesis, we performed an experiment in which participants memorized procedures in a virtual environment and then attempted to recall those procedures. We aimed to understand the effects of three components of immersion on performance. Results demonstrate that a matched software field of view (SFOV), a higher physical FOV, and a higher field of regard (FOR) all contributed to more effective memorization. The best performance was achieved with a matched SFOV and either a high FOV or a high FOR, or both. In addition, our experiment demonstrated that memorization in a virtual environment could be transferred to the real world. The results suggest that, for procedure memorization tasks, increasing the level of immersion even to moderate levels, such as those found in head-mounted displays (HMDs) and display walls, can improve performance significantly compared to lower levels of immersion.
Description

        
@inproceedings{
:10.2312/EGVE/JVRC09/121-128
, booktitle = {
Joint Virtual Reality Conference of EGVE - ICAT - EuroVR
}, editor = {
Michitaka Hirose and Dieter Schmalstieg and Chadwick A. Wingrave and Kunihiro Nishimura
}, title = {{
Higher Levels of Immersion Improve Procedure Memorization Performance
}}, author = {
Bowman, Doug A.
and
Sowndararajan, Ajith
and
Ragan, Eric D.
and
Kopper, Regis
}, year = {
2009
}, publisher = {
The Eurographics Association
}, ISSN = {
1727-530X
}, ISBN = {
978-3-905674-20-0
}, DOI = {
/10.2312/EGVE/JVRC09/121-128
} }
Citation