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Publications

Publications by José Vasconcelos Raposo

2018

Heart Rate, Electrodermic Activity and Self-Reported Experience in Shooter Games, in University Students

Authors
Vasconcelos-Raposo, J; Universidade de Trás-os-Montes e Alto Douro, Vila Real, Portugal.,; Fernandes, J; Nobre, S; Teixeira, S;

Publication
PSYCHTECH & HEALTH JOURNAL

Abstract

2019

Immersive 360 degrees video user experience: impact of different variables in the sense of presence and cybersickness

Authors
Narciso, D; Bessa, M; Melo, M; Coelho, A; Vasconcelos Raposo, J;

Publication
UNIVERSAL ACCESS IN THE INFORMATION SOCIETY

Abstract
Virtual Reality (VR) has been recently gaining interest from researchers and companies, contributing to the development of the associated technologies that aim to transport its users to a virtual environment by the stimulation of their senses. Technologies such as Head-Mounted Displays (HMD), capable of presenting 360 degrees video in 3D, are becoming affordable and, consequently, more common among the average consumer, potentiating the creation of a market for VR experiences. The purpose of this study is to measure the influence of (a) video format (2D/monoscopic vs 3D/stereoscopic), (b) sound format (2D/stereo vs 3D/spatialized), and (c) gender on users' sense of presence and cybersickness, while experiencing a VR application using an HMD. Presence and cybersickness were measured using questionnaires as subjective measures. Portuguese versions of the Igroup Presence Questionnaire for presence and the Simulator Sickness Questionnaire for cybersickness were used. Results revealed no statistically significant differences between (a) VIDEO and (b) SOUND variables on both senses of presence and cybersickness. When paired with (a) VIDEO, the independent variable (c) Gender showed significant differences on almost all subscales of presence. Results suggest that the widely acknowledged differences in spatial ability between genders were a major factor contributing to this outcome.

2018

Psychology, Technology and Knowledge Dissimination

Authors
Vasconcelos-Raposo, J;

Publication
PSYCHTECH & HEALTH JOURNAL

Abstract

2017

Satisfacción sexual en enfermos de cáncer

Authors
Vasconcelos-Raposo, J; Moreira, TL; Arbinaga, F; Teixeira, CM;

Publication
Acta Colombiana de Psicología

Abstract

2022

Do Multisensory Stimuli Benefit the Virtual Reality Experience? A Systematic Review

Authors
Melo, M; Goncalves, G; Monteiro, P; Coelho, H; Vasconcelos Raposo, J; Bessa, M;

Publication
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON VISUALIZATION AND COMPUTER GRAPHICS

Abstract
The majority of virtual reality (VR) applications rely on audiovisual stimuli and do not exploit the addition of other sensory cues that could increase the potential of VR. This systematic review surveys the existing literature on multisensory VR and the impact of haptic, olfactory, and taste cues over audiovisual VR. The goal is to identify the extent to which multisensory stimuli affect the VR experience, which stimuli are used in multisensory VR, the type of VR setups used, and the application fields covered. An analysis of the 105 studies that met the eligibility criteria revealed that 84.8 percent of the studies show a positive impact of multisensory VR experiences. Haptics is the most commonly used stimulus in multisensory VR systems (86.6 percent). Non-immersive and immersive VR setups are preferred over semi-immersive setups. Regarding the application fields, a considerable part was adopted by health professionals and science and engineering professionals. We further conclude that smell and taste are still underexplored, and they can bring significant value to VR applications. More research is recommended on how to synthesize and deliver these stimuli, which still require complex and costly apparatus be integrated into the VR experience in a controlled and straightforward manner.

2022

Evaluation of the impact of different levels of self-representation and body tracking on the sense of presence and embodiment in immersive VR

Authors
Goncalves, G; Melo, M; Barbosa, L; Vasconcelos Raposo, J; Bessa, M;

Publication
VIRTUAL REALITY

Abstract
The main goal of this paper is to investigate the effect of different types of self-representations through floating members (hands vs. hands + feet), virtual full body (hands + feet vs. full-body avatar), walking fidelity (static feet, simulated walking, real walking), and number of tracking points used (head + hands, head + hands + feet, head + hands + feet + hip) on the sense of presence and embodiment through questionnaires. The sample consisted of 98 participants divided into a total of six conditions in a between-subjects design. The HTC Vive headset, controllers, and trackers were used to perform the experiment. Users were tasked to find a series of hidden objects in a virtual environment and place them in a travel bag. We concluded that (1) the addition of feet to floating hands can impair the experienced realism (p = 0.039), (2) both floating members and full-body avatars can be used without affecting presence and embodiment (p > 0.05) as long as there is the same level of control over the self-representation, (3) simulated walking scores of presence and embodiment were similar when compared to static feet and real walking tracking data (p > 0.05), and (4) adding hip tracking overhead, hand and feet tracking (when using a full-body avatar) allows for a more realistic response to stimuli (p = 0.002) and a higher overall feeling of embodiment (p = 0.023).

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