Authors
Unnikrishnan Radhakrishnan, Konstantinos Koumaditis, Francesco Chinello
Publication date
2021/9/10
Source
Behaviour & Information Technology
Volume
40
Issue
12
Pages
1310-1339
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Description
Virtual reality (VR) training offers the capability to industrial workers to acquire skills and address complex tasks by immersing them in a safe and controlled virtual environment. Immersive VR (IVR) training is adopted in many diverse settings, yet little systematic work currently exists on how researchers have applied it for industrial skills training and if it holds the potential to be applied remotely. In this review, 78 representative studies were analysed to answer three key questions: Is IVR an effective training method for industrial skills training? How is research in this field applied? And how can we make IVR training more effective and applicable for remote training? We can testify that IVR is a promising training method with high effectiveness scores. However, our analysis has uncovered several gaps in the application of IVR training, like the lack of learning theories in the design process and limited metrics beyond …
Total citations
20212022202320242194133
Scholar articles
U Radhakrishnan, K Koumaditis, F Chinello - Behaviour & Information Technology, 2021