Perception of a Spatial Implausibility Caused by Seamless Covert Teleportation
Open access
Date
2024Type
- Conference Paper
ETH Bibliography
yes
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Abstract
This paper explores human perception of spatial implausibility using seamless teleportation in circular and hexagonal closed-loop corridors. The impression of impossibility is generated by subtle teleporting the user within these corridors, thereby allowing them to unconsciously skip certain sections of them. Different levels of this ``impossibility’’ are presented by varying the percentage of skipping within these corridors, specifically 0%, 15%, and 30% of the corridor's overall length. These implausibilities are assessed through a within-subject study on naive participants to determine their perception of spatial implausibility. Our findings indicate no significant difference in the detection rates between the two corridor shapes. Interestingly, most participants interpreted the manipulation as a change in the environment's shape or size while only few could perceive the teleportation and the skip. This paves the way for future research to leverage this technique for subtle spatial manipulation. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000664027Publication status
publishedExternal links
Book title
Proceedings of the 19th International Joint Conference on Computer Vision, Imaging and Computer Graphics Theory and Applications - Volume 1: GRAPP, HUCAPP and IVAPPPages / Article No.
Publisher
SciTePressEvent
Subject
Locomotion; Redirection; Redirected Walking; Human PerceptionOrganisational unit
08844 - Kunz, Andreas (Tit.-Prof.) / Kunz, Andreas (Tit.-Prof.)
Notes
Conference lecture held on February 29, 2024.More
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ETH Bibliography
yes
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