PLoS ONE (Jan 2018)

Where am I in virtual reality?

  • Albert H van der Veer,
  • Adrian J T Alsmith,
  • Matthew R Longo,
  • Hong Yu Wong,
  • Betty J Mohler

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0204358
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 10
p. e0204358

Abstract

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It is currently not well understood whether people experience themselves to be located in one or more specific part(s) of their body. Virtual reality (VR) is increasingly used as a tool to study aspects of bodily perception and self-consciousness, due to its strong experimental control and ease in manipulating multi-sensory aspects of bodily experience. To investigate where people self-locate in their body within virtual reality, we asked participants to point directly at themselves with a virtual pointer, in a VR headset. In previous work employing a physical pointer, participants mainly located themselves in the upper face and upper torso. In this study, using a VR headset, participants mainly located themselves in the upper face. In an additional body template task where participants pointed at themselves on a picture of a simple body outline, participants pointed most often to the upper torso, followed by the (upper) face. These results raise the question as to whether head-mounted virtual reality might alter where people locate themselves making them more "head-centred".