Department of Psychology, University of Waterloo, Ontario, Canada.
Cyberpsychol Behav Soc Netw. 2010 Oct;13(5):503-12. doi: 10.1089/cyber.2009.0308. Epub 2010 Feb 25.
Previous research regarding the potential benefits of exposing individuals to surrogate nature (photographs and videos) has found that such immersion results in restorative effects such as increased positive affect, decreased negative affect, and decreased stress. In the current experiment, we examined whether immersion in a virtual computer-generated nature setting could produce restorative effects. Twenty-two participants were equally divided between two conditions, while controlling for gender. In each condition, participants performed a stress-induction task, and were then immersed in virtual reality (VR) for 10 minutes. The control condition featured a slide show in VR, and the nature experimental condition featured an active exploration of a virtual forest. Participants in the nature condition were found to exhibit increased positive affect and decreased stress after immersion in VR when compared to those in the control condition. The results suggest that immersion in virtual nature settings has similar beneficial effects as exposure to surrogate nature. These results also suggest that VR can be used as a tool to study and understand restorative effects.
先前有关让个体接触替代自然(照片和视频)的潜在益处的研究发现,这种沉浸感会产生恢复效果,例如增加积极情绪、减少消极情绪和减少压力。在当前的实验中,我们研究了沉浸在虚拟计算机生成的自然环境中是否会产生恢复效果。22 名参与者被平均分为两组,同时控制了性别。在每种情况下,参与者都进行了一项压力诱导任务,然后在虚拟现实 (VR) 中沉浸 10 分钟。对照条件是 VR 幻灯片展示,而自然实验条件是对虚拟森林的主动探索。与对照组相比,沉浸在 VR 中的自然条件下的参与者表现出积极情绪增加和压力减少。结果表明,与接触替代自然相比,沉浸在虚拟自然环境中具有类似的有益效果。这些结果还表明,VR 可以用作研究和理解恢复效果的工具。