Influence of control/display ratio on the perception of mass of manipulated objects in virtual environments
This paper describes two psychophysical experiments which were conducted to evaluate the influence of the control/display (C/D) ratio on the perception of mass of manipulated objects in virtual environments (VE). In both experiments, a discrimination task was used in which participants were asked to...
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Published in | IEEE Proceedings. VR 2005. Virtual Reality, 2005 pp. 19 - 25 |
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Main Authors | , , , , |
Format | Conference Proceeding |
Language | English Japanese |
Published |
IEEE
2005
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
ISBN | 0780389298 9780780389298 |
ISSN | 1087-8270 |
DOI | 10.1109/VR.2005.1492749 |
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Summary: | This paper describes two psychophysical experiments which were conducted to evaluate the influence of the control/display (C/D) ratio on the perception of mass of manipulated objects in virtual environments (VE). In both experiments, a discrimination task was used in which participants were asked to identify the heavier object between two virtual balls. Participants could weigh each ball via a haptic interface and look at its synthetic display on a computer screen. Unknown to the participants, two parameters varied between each trial: the difference of mass between the balls and the C/D ratio used in the visual display when weighing the comparison ball. The data collected demonstrated that the C/D ratio significantly influenced the result of the mass discrimination task and sometimes even reversed it. The absence of gravity force largely increased this effect. These results suggest that if the visual motion of a manipulated virtual object is amplified when compared to the actual motion of the user's hand (i.e. if the C/D ratio used is smaller than 1), the user tends to feel that the mass of the object decreases. Thus, decreasing or amplifying the motions of the user in a VE can strongly modify the perception of haptic properties of objects that he/she manipulates. Designers of virtual environments could use these results for simplification considerations and also to avoid potential perceptual aberrations. |
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ISBN: | 0780389298 9780780389298 |
ISSN: | 1087-8270 |
DOI: | 10.1109/VR.2005.1492749 |