A substantial number of Virtual Reality (VR) users (studies report 30-80%) suffer from cyber sickness, a negative experience caused by a sensory mismatch of real and virtual stimuli. Prior research proposed different mitigation strategies. Yet, it remains unclear how effectively they work, considering users’ real-world susceptibility to motion sickness. We present a lab experiment, in which we assessed 146 users‘ real-world susceptibility to nausea, dizziness and eye strain before exposing them to a roller coaster ride with low or high visual resolution. We found that nausea is significantly lower for higher resolution but real world motion susceptibility has a much stronger effect on dizziness, nausea, and eye strain. Our work points towards a need for research investigating the effectiveness of approaches to mitigate motion sickness so as not to include them from VR use and access to the metaverse.
«A substantial number of Virtual Reality (VR) users (studies report 30-80%) suffer from cyber sickness, a negative experience caused by a sensory mismatch of real and virtual stimuli. Prior research proposed different mitigation strategies. Yet, it remains unclear how effectively they work, considering users’ real-world susceptibility to motion sickness. We present a lab experiment, in which we assessed 146 users‘ real-world susceptibility to nausea, dizziness and eye strain before exposing them...
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