Evaluation of the relationship between virtual environments and emotions

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Abstract

This study describes the emotional responses to the use of virtual reality (VR) environments. Namely the relation between different environments and axial emotional dimensions: valence, arousal and dominance. To better understand this relation, were also evaluated presence, concentration, relaxation. We evaluated the experience of 146 participants in three virtual environments: Helix® (a roller coaster experience); Yana® (a beach sunset/sunrise experience); Surge® (an abstract environment transformation experience). Helix® proved to be a facilitator of presence and arousal. Surge® results are like the Helix® except that levels of relaxation are lower. Yana® is a facilitator of dominance but levels of arousal and presence was the lowest of the three. The presence was positively related with arousal. Relaxation had a negative relation with arousal and presence. The emotional appraisals were different for each environment. These results are useful in developing virtual environments to model emotional experience.

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Oliveira, T., Noriega, P., Rebelo, F., & Heidrich, R. (2018). Evaluation of the relationship between virtual environments and emotions. In Advances in Intelligent Systems and Computing (Vol. 588, pp. 71–82). Springer Verlag. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-60582-1_8

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