Frontiers in Virtual Reality (Aug 2024)

The impact of first-person avatar customization on embodiment in immersive virtual reality

  • Mar Gonzalez-Franco,
  • Anthony Steed,
  • Anthony Steed,
  • Christopher C. Berger,
  • Ana Tajadura-Jiménez,
  • Ana Tajadura-Jiménez

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/frvir.2024.1436752
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5

Abstract

Read online

In virtual reality (VR), users can embody a wide variety of avatars, from digital replicas of themselves through diverse human body styles and appearances to non-humanoid representations. Although choosing a body to inhabit is part of what makes VR such an engaging experience, various studies have shown how embodiment may change the way we perceive ourselves and others both inside and outside VR. In our study, we explored whether first-person versus third-person avatar customization would lead to changes in embodiment. Furthermore, participants were embodied in larger-sized avatars based on the hypothesis that embodiment would lead to a change in implicit bias toward larger-sized people. Our results show that third-person avatar customization led to a decrease in the perceived embodiment of the larger-sized avatar and that, on the contrary, higher embodiment was associated with a reduction in implicit biases toward larger-sized people in the first-person avatar customization mode. These findings suggest that third-person avatar customization leads to reduced feelings of embodiment, while first-person avatar customization may support more radical body changes.

Keywords