A Wheelchair Locomotion Interface in a VR Disability Simulation Reduces Implicit Bias
Autor: | Tanvir Irfan Chowdhury, John Quarles |
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Rok vydání: | 2022 |
Předmět: |
medicine.medical_specialty
Recall Computer science Virtual Reality Implicit-association test Optical head-mounted display Virtual reality Computer Graphics and Computer-Aided Design Bias Implicit Task (project management) Test (assessment) Wheelchair Physical medicine and rehabilitation Wheelchairs Signal Processing Computer Graphics medicine Humans Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition Locomotion Software Avatar |
Zdroj: | IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics. 28:4658-4670 |
ISSN: | 2160-9306 1077-2626 |
DOI: | 10.1109/tvcg.2021.3099115 |
Popis: | This research investigates how experiencing virtual embodiment in a wheelchair affects implicit bias towards people who use wheelchairs. We also investigate how receiving information from a virtual instructor who uses a wheelchair affects implicit bias towards people who use wheelchairs. Implicit biases are actions or judgments of people towards various concepts or stereotypes (e.g., races). We hypothesized that experiencing a Disability Simulation (DS) through an avatar in a wheelchair and receiving information from an instructor with a disability will have a significant effect on participants' ability to recall disability-related information and will reduce implicit biases towards people who use wheelchairs. To investigate this hypothesis, a 2x2 between-subjects user study was conducted where participants experienced an immersive VR DS that presents information about Multiple Sclerosis (MS) with factors of instructor (i.e., instructor with a disability versus instructor without a disability) and locomotion interface (i.e., without a disability - locomotion through in-place-walking, with a disability - locomotion in a wheelchair). Participants took a disability-focused Implicit Association Test two times, once before and once after experiencing the DS. They also took a test of knowledge retention about MS. The primary result is: experiencing the DS through locomotion in a wheelchair was better for both the disability-related information recall task and reducing implicit bias towards people who use wheelchairs. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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