著者
徳永 康祐 小川 将樹 池畑 諭 増田 知尋 妹尾 武治
出版者
特定非営利活動法人 日本バーチャルリアリティ学会
雑誌
日本バーチャルリアリティ学会論文誌 (ISSN:1344011X)
巻号頁・発行日
vol.21, no.1, pp.35-47, 2016

Recently, we can very easily and frequently find vection scenes in Japanese movies and animation films. However there had not been a database for them. Our purpose of this study was to make a database of vection scenes in Japanese movies and animations and provide VR psychologists all over the world with that database. We checked many movies and animations and found 30 vection scenes. We uploaded that information on our web site (senotake.jp). We also conducted a psychological experiment to assess vection strength obtained by those scenes and compared them to perceived vection obtained by a normal and simple vection stimulus (the standard stimulus) that had been used in our previous vection experiments. The results showed that perceived vection induced by those scenes were nearly the same strength as that of vection induced by the standard stimulus. We also revealed some effective and inefficient techniques of scene presentations in this study. Finally we calculated various image statistics and compared them to vection strength. That analysis revealed that a scene that contained more changes could induce stronger vection. We sincerely hope that this study can be the bridge between experimental psychologists and contents creators and developers.
著者
徳永 康祐 小川 将樹 池畑 諭 増田 知尋 妹尾 武治
出版者
特定非営利活動法人 日本バーチャルリアリティ学会
雑誌
日本バーチャルリアリティ学会論文誌 (ISSN:1344011X)
巻号頁・発行日
vol.21, no.1, pp.35-47, 2016-03-31 (Released:2017-02-01)
被引用文献数
1

Recently, we can very easily and frequently find vection scenes in Japanese movies and animation films. However there had not been a database for them. Our purpose of this study was to make a database of vection scenes in Japanese movies and animations and provide VR psychologists all over the world with that database. We checked many movies and animations and found 30 vection scenes. We uploaded that information on our web site (senotake.jp). We also conducted a psychological experiment to assess vection strength obtained by those scenes and compared them to perceived vection obtained by a normal and simple vection stimulus (the standard stimulus) that had been used in our previous vection experiments. The results showed that perceived vection induced by those scenes were nearly the same strength as that of vection induced by the standard stimulus. We also revealed some effective and inefficient techniques of scene presentations in this study. Finally we calculated various image statistics and compared them to vection strength. That analysis revealed that a scene that contained more changes could induce stronger vection. We sincerely hope that this study can be the bridge between experimental psychologists and contents creators and developers.