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The importance of postural cues for determining eye height in immersive virtual reality

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The importance of postural cues for determining eye height in immersive virtual reality. / Leyrer, Markus; Linkenauger, Sally; Buelthoff, Heinrich et al.
In: PLoS ONE, Vol. 10, No. 5, e0127000, 18.05.2015.

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Leyrer M, Linkenauger S, Buelthoff H, Mohler BJ. The importance of postural cues for determining eye height in immersive virtual reality. PLoS ONE. 2015 May 18;10(5):e0127000. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0127000

Author

Leyrer, Markus ; Linkenauger, Sally ; Buelthoff, Heinrich et al. / The importance of postural cues for determining eye height in immersive virtual reality. In: PLoS ONE. 2015 ; Vol. 10, No. 5.

Bibtex

@article{ba0a71af25cc4bd59c7aa6fb23f8fba9,
title = "The importance of postural cues for determining eye height in immersive virtual reality",
abstract = "In human perception, the ability to determine eye height is essential, because eye height is used to scale heights of objects, velocities, affordances and distances, all of which allow for successful environmental interaction. It is well understood that eye height is fundamental to determine many of these percepts. Yet, how eye height itself is provided is still largely unknown. While the information potentially specifying eye height in the real world is naturally coincident in an environment with a regular ground surface, these sources of information can be easily divergent in similar and common virtual reality scenarios. Thus, we conducted virtual reality experiments where we manipulated the virtual eye height in a distance perception task to investigate how eye height might be determined in such a scenario. We found that humans rely more on their postural cues for determining their eye height if there is a conflict between visual and postural information and little opportunity for perceptual-motor calibration is provided. This is demonstrated by the predictable variations in their distance estimates. Our results suggest that the eye height in such circumstances is informed by postural cues when estimating egocentric distances in virtual reality and consequently, does not depend on an internalized value for eye height.",
author = "Markus Leyrer and Sally Linkenauger and Heinrich Buelthoff and Mohler, {B. J.}",
year = "2015",
month = may,
day = "18",
doi = "10.1371/journal.pone.0127000",
language = "English",
volume = "10",
journal = "PLoS ONE",
issn = "1932-6203",
publisher = "Public Library of Science",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The importance of postural cues for determining eye height in immersive virtual reality

AU - Leyrer, Markus

AU - Linkenauger, Sally

AU - Buelthoff, Heinrich

AU - Mohler, B. J.

PY - 2015/5/18

Y1 - 2015/5/18

N2 - In human perception, the ability to determine eye height is essential, because eye height is used to scale heights of objects, velocities, affordances and distances, all of which allow for successful environmental interaction. It is well understood that eye height is fundamental to determine many of these percepts. Yet, how eye height itself is provided is still largely unknown. While the information potentially specifying eye height in the real world is naturally coincident in an environment with a regular ground surface, these sources of information can be easily divergent in similar and common virtual reality scenarios. Thus, we conducted virtual reality experiments where we manipulated the virtual eye height in a distance perception task to investigate how eye height might be determined in such a scenario. We found that humans rely more on their postural cues for determining their eye height if there is a conflict between visual and postural information and little opportunity for perceptual-motor calibration is provided. This is demonstrated by the predictable variations in their distance estimates. Our results suggest that the eye height in such circumstances is informed by postural cues when estimating egocentric distances in virtual reality and consequently, does not depend on an internalized value for eye height.

AB - In human perception, the ability to determine eye height is essential, because eye height is used to scale heights of objects, velocities, affordances and distances, all of which allow for successful environmental interaction. It is well understood that eye height is fundamental to determine many of these percepts. Yet, how eye height itself is provided is still largely unknown. While the information potentially specifying eye height in the real world is naturally coincident in an environment with a regular ground surface, these sources of information can be easily divergent in similar and common virtual reality scenarios. Thus, we conducted virtual reality experiments where we manipulated the virtual eye height in a distance perception task to investigate how eye height might be determined in such a scenario. We found that humans rely more on their postural cues for determining their eye height if there is a conflict between visual and postural information and little opportunity for perceptual-motor calibration is provided. This is demonstrated by the predictable variations in their distance estimates. Our results suggest that the eye height in such circumstances is informed by postural cues when estimating egocentric distances in virtual reality and consequently, does not depend on an internalized value for eye height.

U2 - 10.1371/journal.pone.0127000

DO - 10.1371/journal.pone.0127000

M3 - Journal article

VL - 10

JO - PLoS ONE

JF - PLoS ONE

SN - 1932-6203

IS - 5

M1 - e0127000

ER -