Kitazaki Michiteru, Hamada Takeo, Yoshiho Katsuya, Kondo Ryota, Amemiya Tomohiro, Hirota Koichi, Ikei Yasushi
Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Toyohashi University of Technology, Japan.
Interfaculty Initiative in Information Studies, The University of Tokyo, Japan.
Iperception. 2019 Oct 15;10(5):2041669519882448. doi: 10.1177/2041669519882448. eCollection 2019 Sep-Oct.
This article reports the first psychological evidence that the combination of oscillating optic flow and synchronous foot vibration evokes a walking sensation. In this study, we first captured a walker's first-person-view scenes with footstep timings. Participants observed the naturally oscillating scenes on a head-mounted display with vibrations on their feet and rated walking-related sensations using a Visual Analogue Scale. They perceived stronger sensations of self-motion, walking, leg action, and telepresence from the oscillating visual flow with foot vibrations than with randomized-timing vibrations or without vibrations. The artificial delay of foot vibrations with respect to the scenes diminished the walking-related sensations. These results suggest that the oscillating visual scenes and synchronous foot vibrations are effective for creating virtual walking sensations.
本文报告了首个心理学证据,即振荡光流与同步足部振动相结合会引发行走感觉。在本研究中,我们首先捕捉了带有脚步时机的步行者第一人称视角场景。参与者在头戴式显示器上观察自然振荡的场景,并感受脚部的振动,然后使用视觉模拟量表对与行走相关的感觉进行评分。与随机定时振动或无振动相比,他们从带有足部振动的振荡视觉流中感受到更强的自我运动、行走、腿部动作和临场感。足部振动相对于场景的人为延迟减弱了与行走相关的感觉。这些结果表明,振荡视觉场景和同步足部振动对于创造虚拟行走感觉是有效的。