Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
931362 International Journal of Psychophysiology 2012 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

The present study is the first that examined neuronal underpinnings of spatial presence using multi-channel EEG in an interactive virtual reality (VR). We compared two VR-systems: a highly immersive Single-Wall-VR-system (three-dimensional view, large screen) and a less immersive Desktop-VR-system (two-dimensional view, small screen). Twenty-nine participants performed a spatial navigation task in a virtual maze and had to state their sensation of “being there” on a 5-point rating scale. Task-related power decrease/increase (TRPD/TRPI) in the Alpha band (8–12 Hz) and coherence analyses in different frequency bands were used to analyze the EEG data. The Single-Wall-VR-system caused a more intense presence experience than the Desktop-VR-system. This increased feeling of presence in the Single-Wall-VR-condition was accompanied by an increased parietal TRPD in the Alpha band, which is associated with cortical activation. The lower presence experience in the Desktop-VR-group was accompanied by a stronger functional connectivity between frontal and parietal brain regions indicating that the communication between these two brain areas is crucial for the presence experience. Hence, we found a positive relationship between presence and parietal brain activation and a negative relationship between presence and frontal brain activation in an interactive VR-paradigm, supporting the results of passive non-interactive VR-studies.

► Presence experience is associated with activity of a fronto-parietal network. ► Different immersive virtual realities lead to different cortical activation patterns. ► Cortical correlates of presence in non-interactive and interactive VR are comparable.

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