Abstract—Head-mounted displays (HMDs) allow users to observe virtual environments (VEs) from an egocentric perspective. However, several experiments have provided evidence that e...
Falko Kellner, Benjamin Bolte, Gerd Bruder, Ulrich...
In virtual environments that use head-mounted displays (HMD), distance judgments to targets on the ground are compressed, at least when indicated through visually-directed walking...
Peter Willemsen, Mark B. Colton, Sarah H. Creem-Re...
Few HMD-based virtual environment systems display a rendering of the user's own body. Subjectively, this often leads to a sense of disembodiment in the virtual world. We expl...
Betty J. Mohler, Sarah H. Creem-Regehr, William B....
People underestimate egocentric distances in head-mounted display virtual environments, as compared to estimates done in the real world. Our work investigates whether distances ar...
Ivelina V. Alexandrova, Paolina T. Teneva, Stephan...
Most head-mounted displays (HMDs) suffer from substantial optical distortion, and vendor-supplied specifications for field-of-view often are at variance with reality. Such display...
Scott A. Kuhl, William B. Thompson, Sarah H. Creem...