Authors:
Behrang Keshavarz, Nadia De Luca, Jennifer L. Campos, Stefania S. Moro, Katlyn Peck, Jennifer K. E. Steeves, Bruce Haycock
Keywords:
driving simulation, monocular vision, motion sickness, simulator sickness, vection
Abstract:
Keshavarz B.; Luca N.D.; Campos J.L.; Moro S.S.; Peck K.; Steeves J.K.E. and Haycock B. Simulator sickness does not differ between drivers with monocular and binocular vision In: Proceedings of the Driving Simulation Conference 2024 Europe VR, Driving Simulation Association, Strasbourg, France, 2024, pp. 83-90
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@inproceedings{Keshavarz2024,
title = {Simulator sickness does not differ between drivers with monocular and binocular vision},
author = {Behrang Keshavarz and Nadia De Luca and Jennifer L. Campos and Stefania S. Moro and Katlyn Peck and Jennifer K. E. Steeves and Bruce Haycock},
editor = {Andras Kemeny and Jean-Rémy Chardonnet and Florent Colombet and Stéphane Espié},
isbn = {978-2-9573777-5-6},
year = {2024},
date = {2024-09-18},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the Driving Simulation Conference 2024 Europe VR},
pages = {83-90},
address = {Strasbourg, France},
organization = {Driving Simulation Association},
abstract = {Simulator sickness is a common phenomenon for many users of driving simulators, characterized by a variety of symptoms such as nausea, disorientation, fatigue, headache, or eyestrain. One individual characteristic that has not been investigated to date is the effect of monocular (i.e., functional vision in only one eye due to the removal of an eye) versus binocular vision on simulator sickness. Since driving simulators can be useful tools for assessing potential differences in driving performance measures between drivers with monocular or binocular vision, it is relevant to investigate whether simulator sickness may affect these two groups differently. Here, 37 participants (15 monocular vision, 22 binocular vision) were engaged in a driving simulation task for approx. 25 minutes using a high-fidelity driving simulator. Simulator sickness was measured using the FMS and the SSQ. Results did not show any differences with regards to simulator sickness between drivers with monocular or binocular vision. Instead, the results suggested that the best predictors of simulator sickness severity were self-reported history of traditional motion sickness measured via the MSSQ and the feeling of vection (illusory self-motion), accounting for 32% of the variance.},
keywords = {},
}
Download .bib file
TY - CONF
TI - Simulator sickness does not differ between drivers with monocular and binocular vision
AU - Keshavarz, Behrang
AU - Luca, Nadia De
AU - Campos, Jennifer L.
AU - Moro, Stefania S.
AU - Peck, Katlyn
AU - Steeves, Jennifer K. E.
AU - Haycock, Bruce
C1 - Strasbourg, France
C3 - Proceedings of the Driving Simulation Conference 2024 Europe VR
DA - 2024/09/18
PY - 2024
SP - 83
EP - 90
LA - en-US
PB - Driving Simulation Association
SN - 978-2-9573777-5-6
L2 - https://proceedings.driving-simulation.org/proceeding/dsc-2024/simulator-sickness-does-not-differ-between-drivers-with-monocular-and-binocular-vision
ER -
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