Evaluating the importance of multi-sensory input on memory and the sense of presence in virtual environments

322 subjects participated in an experimental study to investigate the effects of tactile, olfactory, audio and visual sensory cues on a participant's sense of presence in a virtual environment and on their memory for the environment and the objects in that environment. Results strongly indicate that increasing the modalities of sensory input in a virtual environment can increase both the sense of presence and memory for objects in the environment. In particular, the addition of tactile, olfactory and auditory cues to a virtual environment increased the user's sense of presence and memory of the environment. Surprisingly, increasing the level of visual detail did not result in an increase in the user's sense of presence or memory of the environment.

[1]  Woodrow Barfield,et al.  The Sense of Presence within Auditory Virtual Environments , 1996, Presence: Teleoperators & Virtual Environments.

[2]  Y. Ikei,et al.  Texture presentation by vibratory tactile display-image based presentation of a tactile texture , 1997, Proceedings of IEEE 1997 Annual International Symposium on Virtual Reality.

[3]  Woodrow Barfield,et al.  Presence within Virtual Environments as a Function of Visual Display Parameters , 1996, Presence: Teleoperators & Virtual Environments.

[4]  Gary Fontaine,et al.  The Experience of a Sense of Presence in Intercultural and International Encounters , 1992, Presence: Teleoperators & Virtual Environments.

[5]  Makoto Shimojo,et al.  Shape identification performance and pin-matrix density in a 3 dimensional tactile display , 1997, Proceedings of IEEE 1997 Annual International Symposium on Virtual Reality.

[6]  Woodrow Barfield,et al.  Comments on the Use of Olfactory Displays for Virtual Environments , 1996, Presence: Teleoperators & Virtual Environments.

[7]  Michitaka Hirose,et al.  Multisensory data sensualization based on human perception , 1996, Proceedings of the IEEE 1996 Virtual Reality Annual International Symposium.