Authors
Valentin Schwind, Pascal Knierim, Cagri Tasci, Patrick Franczak, Nico Haas, Niels Henze
Publication date
2017/5/2
Conference
Proceedings of the 2017 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems
Pages
1577-1582
Publisher
ACM
Description
Rendering the user's body in virtual reality increases immersion and presence the illusion of "being there". Recent technology enables determining the pose and position of the hands to render them accordingly while interacting within the virtual environment. Virtual reality applications often use realistic male or female hands, mimic robotic hands, or cartoon hands. However, it is unclear how users perceive different hand styles. We conducted a study with 14 male and 14 female participants in virtual reality to investigate the effect of gender on the perception of six different hands. Quantitative and qualitative results show that women perceive lower levels of presence while using male avatar hands and male perceive lower levels of presence using non-human avatar hands. While women dislike male hands, men accept and feel presence with avatar hands of both genders. Our results highlight the importance of …
Total citations
201720182019202020212022202320244771521203211
Scholar articles
V Schwind, P Knierim, C Tasci, P Franczak, N Haas… - Proceedings of the 2017 CHI conference on human …, 2017