University of Wollongong
Browse

A pilot study examining the unexpected vection hypothesis of cybersickness

Download (441.98 kB)
conference contribution
posted on 2025-02-04, 23:56 authored by Joel TeixeiraJoel Teixeira, Sebastien MielletSebastien Miellet, Stephen PalmisanoStephen Palmisano
The relationship between vection (illusory self-motion) and cybersickness is complex. This pilot study examined whether only unexpected vection provokes sickness during head-mounted display (HMD) based virtual reality (VR). 20 participants ran through the tutorial of Mission: ISS (an HMD VR app) until they experienced notable sickness (maximum exposure was 15 minutes). We found that: 1) cybersickness was positively related to vection strength; and 2) cybersickness appeared to be more likely to occur during unexpected vection. Given the implications of these findings, future studies should attempt to replicate them and confirm the unexpected vection hypothesis with larger sample sizes and rigorous experimental designs. vection is more likely to occur and be more compelling when the self-motion is expected, anticipated or primed [4–6], unexpected vection and its effects during HMD VR have received little examination. This exploratory pilot study examined the proposal that only unexpected vection provokes cybersickness.

Funding

Unleashing the potential of VR: reducing sickness in head-mounted displays : Australian Research Council (ARC) | DP210101475

History

Journal title

Proceedings of the ACM Symposium on Virtual Reality Software and Technology, VRST

Total pages

2

Editors

SN Spencer

Publisher

ASSOC COMPUTING MACHINERY

Name of conference

27th ACM Symposium on Virtual Reality Software and Technology (VRST)

Start date

2021-12-08

End date

2021-12-10

Location

JAPAN, Osaka Univ, Osaka

Publication status

  • Published

Language

English