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To be (me) or not to be? Photorealistic avatars and older adults

conference contribution
posted on 2017-01-01, 00:00 authored by A Puri, S Baker, Thuong HoangThuong Hoang, R C Zuffi
The growth of commercial VR technology has fueled an interest in user embodiment, where a graphical representation of the user, a virtual avatar, enables a more immersive experience and richer interaction. Recent research suggests that older adults are increasingly playing digital games. These factors, combined with the rapidly ageing population, means it is vital that avatar creation software responds to the needs of older adults. Our study seeks to address these needs, by better understanding older adult opinions about virtual avatars that are photorealistic, i.e. bearing likeness to their physical appearances. In our exploratory study, we interviewed six older adults aged between 70 and 80 years and asked them to evaluate 18 photorealistic avatars created with three different commercial avatar creation tools. Results showed that participants were not satisfied with their custom-made avatars due to them missing characteristic features. The results also showed that there was major consensus towards using photorealistic avatars across a range of virtual environments. 1.

History

Event

Australian computer-human interaction. Conference (29th : 2017 : Brisbane, Qld.)

Pagination

503 - 507

Publisher

ACM

Location

Brisbane, Qld.

Place of publication

New York, N.Y.

Start date

2017-11-28

End date

2017-12-01

ISBN-13

9781450353793

Language

eng

Publication classification

E1 Full written paper - refereed

Copyright notice

2017, Association for Computing Machinery

Editor/Contributor(s)

Alessandro Soro, Dhaval Vyas, Bernd Ploderer, Ann Morrison, Jenny Waycott, Margot Brereton

Title of proceedings

OzCHI 2017 : Proceedings of the 29th Australian Computer-Human Interaction Conference

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