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DOES IMMERSIVE VIRTUAL REALITY INDUCE CYBERSICKNESS AND IMPACT EQUILIBRIUM COORDINATION?
- Source :
- Journal of Medical pharmaceutical and allied sciences. 10:3546-3551
- Publication Year :
- 2021
-
Abstract
- Cybersickness continues to become a negative consequence that degrades the interface for users of virtual worlds created for Virtual Reality (VR) users. There are various abnormalities that might cause quantifiable changes in body awareness when donning an Head Mounted Display (HMD) in a Virtual Environment (VE). VR headsets do provide VE that matches the actual world and allows users to have a range of experiences. Motion sickness and simulation sickness performance gives self-report assessments of cybersickness with VEs. In this study a simulator sickness questionnaire is being used to measure the aftereffects of the virtual environment. This research aims to answer if Immersive VR induce cybersickness and impact equilibrium coordination. The present research is formed as a cross-sectional observational analysis. According to the selection criteria, a total of 40 subjects would be recruited from AVBRH, Sawangi Meghe for the research. With intervention being used the experiment lasted 6 months. Simulator sickness questionnaire is used to evaluate the after-effects of a virtual environment. It holds a single period for measuring motion sickness and evaluation of equilibrium tests were done twice at exit and after 10 mins. Virtual reality being used in video games is still in its development. Integrating gameplay action into the VR experience will necessitate a significant amount of study and development. The study has evaluated if Immersive VR induce cybersickness and impact equilibrium coordination. To measure cybersickness, numerous scales have been developed. The essence of cybersickness has been revealed owing to work on motion sickness in a simulated system.
- Subjects :
- Pharmacology
Interface (computing)
Pharmaceutical Science
Optical head-mounted display
Virtual reality
computer.software_genre
medicine.disease
Body awareness
Metaverse
Motion sickness
Virtual machine
Human–computer interaction
Drug Discovery
medicine
Simulator sickness
Psychology
Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics (miscellaneous)
computer
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 23207418
- Volume :
- 10
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of Medical pharmaceutical and allied sciences
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi...........35e692beaf643969a1a07320c10ed06f