Identifying physiological correlates of cybersickness using heartbeat-evoked potential analysis

Author:

Chang Eunhee,Kim Hyun Taek,Yoo ByounghyunORCID

Abstract

AbstractMany studies have consistently proven that repeatedly watching virtual reality (VR) content can reduce cybersickness. Moreover, the discomfort level decreases when the VR content includes an unusual orientation, such as an inverted scene. However, few studies have investigated the physiological changes during these experiences. The present study aimed to identify psychophysiological correlates, especially the neural processing, of cybersickness. Twenty participants experienced two types of VR orientation (upright and inverted), which were repeated three times. During the experience, we recorded the participants’ subjective levels of discomfort, brain waves, cardiac signals, and eye trajectories. We performed a heartbeat-evoked potential (HEP) analysis to elucidate the cortical activity of heartbeats while experiencing cybersickness. The results showed that the severity of cybersickness decreased as the participants repeatedly watched the VR content. The participants also reported less nausea when watching the inverted orientation. We only found a significant suppression at the fronto-central HEP amplitudes in the upright orientation for the physiological changes. This study provides a comprehensive understanding of bodily responses to varying degrees of cybersickness. In addition, the HEP results suggest that this approach might reflect the neural correlates of transient changes in heartbeats caused by cybersickness.

Funder

Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy

National Research Foundation of Korea

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Computer Graphics and Computer-Aided Design,Human-Computer Interaction,Software

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1. Efficient VR-AR communication method using virtual replicas in XR remote collaboration;International Journal of Human-Computer Studies;2024-10

2. Who says you are so sick? An investigation on individual susceptibility to cybersickness triggers using EEG, EGG and ECG;IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics;2024-05

3. Passive Vital Sign Monitoring via Facial Vibrations Leveraging AR/VR Headsets;Proceedings of the 21st Annual International Conference on Mobile Systems, Applications and Services;2023-06-18

4. The effect of additional shooting task on alleviating virtual reality motion sickness;Proceedings of the 2023 3rd International Conference on Robotics and Control Engineering;2023-05-12

5. Brain activity during cybersickness: a scoping review;Virtual Reality;2023-04-12

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