22 research outputs found
Gaze-controlled, computer-assisted communication in Intensive Care Unit: "speaking through the eyes".
The influence of body movement on presence in virtual environments
We describe an experiment to assess the influence of body movements on presence in a virtual environment. In the experiment 20 participants were to walk through a virtual field of trees and count the trees with diseased leaves. A 2 x 2 between-subjects design was used to assess the influence of two factors on presence: tree height variation and task complexity. The field with greater variation in tree height required participants to bend down and look up more than in the lower variation tree height field. In the higher complexity task participants were told to remember the distribution of diseased trees in the field as well as to count them. The results showed a significant positive association between reported presence and the amount of body movement - in particular, head yaw - and the extent to which participants bent down and stood up. There was also a strong interaction effect between task complexity and gender: Women in the more-complex task reported a much lower sense of presence than in the simpler task. For applications in which presence is an important requirement, the research in this paper suggests that presence will be increased when interaction techniques are employed that permit the user to engage in whole-body movement
Valutazione dei danni causati alle coltivazioni agricole in Puglia dallo Storno (Sturnus vulgaris L)
IL VOLUME SI OCCUPA DEL MONITORAGGIO DELLA FUANA SELVATICA E DELLA VALUTAZIONE DEI DANNI ALL'AGRICOLTURA. METODI E CASI STUDIO
Effect of high-altitude exposure on cognitive and psychological performance: data from the HighCARE project
Cognitive Frontal assessment in Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis: the anti-saccade paradigm
INFLUENCE HAEMODYNAMIC STATE DURING ORTHOTOPIC LIVER TRANSPLANTATION WITH BETA-BLOCKERS THERAPY IN PIGGYBACK SURGICAL TECNIQUE
Anti-Saccade paradigm in the cognitive frontal assessment of Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis
Quantification of the starling population, estimation and mapping of the damage to olive crops in the apulia region
The presence of wildlife in areas with a high concentration of farming activities can create a conflict between conservation objectives and productive purposes. Near Brindisi (Apulia, S-E Italy), a substantial amount of cash compensation claims for damages reported by local farmers and attributed to starlings (Sturnus vulgaris) has been registered. The aim of this study was to quantify the starling population wintering in the Apulia region, in order to assess the potential damage to crop production caused by this species. Our analysis was conducted over three years and included three main activities: a study of starling abundance and movements, the identification of areas and crops affected by damages, and a determination of the damage to the agricultural system in terms of quantity and concentration (heatmap). The study showed a loss of expected production that was coherent with the eating capacity of starlings wintering in the region. This means a loss, in terms of gross profitable production, of around 550,000 euros concentrated in a few narrow areas close to the roosts. Results on species behavior, damage quantification, and mapping are useful elements aimed to activate trade-off measures to preserve production and protection objectives, and to allow policymakers to address enforcement interventions and to establish parameters for financial compensation
The virtual ante-room: assessing presence through expectation and surprise
We describe an experiment where subjects entered a
virtual replica of the laboratory in which the
experiment was taking place. They then moved
through a door to a new virtual location and carried
out the main experimental task, and then returned to
the virtual lab. In the real lab they had learned to
search for box-shaped objects and point at a telephone
whenever it rang. In the virtual lab, additional
colouredboxes were introduced, and although the
virtual phone position was not moved, the real phone
of which it was a replica was moved. On exit from the
virtual to the real laboratory, subjects were asked
about their degree of surprise that the additional
coloured boxes were not there and that the phone had
been moved. This was in the context of an experiment
to assess the influence of body movement on presence.
This paper reportson the relationship between this
surprise factor and the presence reported for the main
part of the experiment. It was found that the surprise
factor and reported presence were significantly
positively correlated, suggesting a new approach
towards a behavioural measure of presence
