| Literature DB >> 31662838 |
Michiteru Kitazaki1, Takeo Hamada2, Katsuya Yoshiho, Ryota Kondo1, Tomohiro Amemiya3, Koichi Hirota4, Yasushi Ikei5.
Abstract
This article reports the first psychological evidence that the combination of oscillating optic flow and synchronous foot vibration evokes a walking sensation. In this study, we first captured a walker's first-person-view scenes with footstep timings. Participants observed the naturally oscillating scenes on a head-mounted display with vibrations on their feet and rated walking-related sensations using a Visual Analogue Scale. They perceived stronger sensations of self-motion, walking, leg action, and telepresence from the oscillating visual flow with foot vibrations than with randomized-timing vibrations or without vibrations. The artificial delay of foot vibrations with respect to the scenes diminished the walking-related sensations. These results suggest that the oscillating visual scenes and synchronous foot vibrations are effective for creating virtual walking sensations.Entities:
Keywords: jitter; optic flow; self-motion; tactile vibration; vection; walking
Year: 2019 PMID: 31662838 PMCID: PMC6796215 DOI: 10.1177/2041669519882448
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Iperception ISSN: 2041-6695
Figure 1.Stereo camera device for capturing stereo motion images (top-left). A pair of shoes with microphones for capturing timings of footsteps (top-right). Three locations where the walking scenes were captured (bottom).
Figure 3.An example of a screen for VAS ratings.
Figure 2.Profiles of presented vibrations to heel and forefoot (left). Experimental apparatus for tactile stimuli (right).
Figure 4.Results of Experiment 1. Averaged VAS ratings among participants are plotted, and vertical error bars indicate the standard error of the mean. VAS = Visual Analogue Scale.
Figure 5.Results of Experiment 2. VAS = Visual Analogue Scale.