Hung Lillian, Fisher Lenny, Wong Jeffrey, Zhao Yong, Yuen Katrina, Ren Lily Haopu
Innovation in Dementia and Aging Lab, The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada.
School of Nursing, The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada.
PLoS One. 2025 Jun 2;20(6):e0325111. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0325111. eCollection 2025.
Virtual reality (VR) is gaining traction in healthcare, education, and cultural sectors, from simulations in medical education to immersive museum experiences. Recently, VR has emerged as a powerful tool for Indigenous cultural preservation, language revitalization, and storytelling, offering immersive ways to safeguard knowledge and strengthen community connections. However, despite VR's potential to support Indigenous self-determination, little is known about the extent of Indigenous leadership, engagements, and settler-Indigenous collaborations in VR development. There is a critical need to examine how VR can be ethically and meaningfully co-designed with Indigenous communities to ensure cultural integrity, respect for Indigenous knowledge systems, and equitable participation in technological innovation. Thus, this scoping review aims to identify practical strategies and best practices for co-designing VR with Indigenous communities. In accordance with the JBI methodology, we will conduct a comprehensive search across seven electronic databases, including MEDLINE (EBSCOhost), Scopus, Web of Science, ACM Digital Library, IEEE Xplore, Compendex (Engineering Village), and ProQuest Dissertations and Theses Global (ProQuest). Google Scholar will also be searched for grey literature sources. Eligible studies will focus on Indigenous populations (Population) and fully immersive VR co-design (Concept) across various contexts. Studies that do not discuss the design process will be excluded. Two independent reviewers will conduct literature screening, data extraction, and analysis, with findings synthesized narratively and presented in a structured charting table. The results will be disseminated through a peer-reviewed journal publication and shared with relevant community partners to support knowledge translation and application.
虚拟现实(VR)在医疗保健、教育和文化领域越来越受到关注,从医学教育中的模拟到沉浸式博物馆体验。最近,VR已成为保护原住民文化、振兴语言和讲述故事的有力工具,提供了沉浸式方式来保护知识并加强社区联系。然而,尽管VR有支持原住民自决的潜力,但对于原住民在VR开发中的领导力、参与度以及定居者与原住民合作的程度却知之甚少。迫切需要研究如何与原住民社区进行符合道德且有意义的VR共同设计,以确保文化完整性、尊重原住民知识体系并公平参与技术创新。因此,本范围综述旨在确定与原住民社区共同设计VR的实用策略和最佳实践。根据JBI方法,我们将在七个电子数据库中进行全面搜索,包括MEDLINE(EBSCOhost)、Scopus、科学网、ACM数字图书馆、IEEE Xplore、Compendex(工程村)和ProQuest全球学位论文与学术论文数据库(ProQuest)。还将在谷歌学术上搜索灰色文献来源。符合条件的研究将聚焦于原住民群体(人群)以及在各种背景下的完全沉浸式VR共同设计(概念)。不讨论设计过程的研究将被排除。两名独立评审员将进行文献筛选、数据提取和分析,研究结果将以叙述方式综合呈现并展示在结构化图表中。研究结果将通过同行评审期刊发表进行传播,并与相关社区伙伴分享,以支持知识转化和应用。