Investigating the Uncanny Valley Phenomenon Through the Temporal Dynamics of Neural Responses to Virtual Characters

06/28/2023
by   Chiara Gorlini, et al.
0

The Uncanny Valley phenomenon refers to the feeling of unease that arises when interacting with characters that appear almost, but not quite, human-like. First theorised by Masahiro Mori in 1970, it has since been widely observed in different contexts from humanoid robots to video games, in which it can result in players feeling uncomfortable or disconnected from the game, leading to a lack of immersion and potentially reducing the overall enjoyment. The phenomenon has been observed and described mostly through behavioural studies based on self-reported scales of uncanny feeling: however, there is still no consensus on its cognitive and perceptual origins, which limits our understanding of its impact on player experience. In this paper, we present a study aimed at identifying the mechanisms that trigger the uncanny response by collecting and analysing both self-reported feedback and EEG data.

READ FULL TEXT
research
07/07/2023

Investigating Perceived and Mechanical Challenge in Games Through Cognitive Activity

Game difficulty is a crucial aspect of game design, that can be directly...
research
08/12/2022

What Features Influence Impact Feel? A Study of Impact Feedback in Action Games

Making the hit effect satisfy players is a long-standing problem faced b...
research
03/13/2021

What Do We See: An Investigation Into the Representation of Disability in Video Games

There has been a large body of research focused on the representation of...
research
06/28/2019

Rhythm Dungeon: A Blockchain-based Music Roguelike Game

Rhythm Dungeon is a rhythm game which leverages the blockchain as a shar...
research
10/06/2022

Perception of Personality Traits in Crowds of Virtual Humans

This paper proposes a perceptual visual analysis regarding the personali...
research
07/14/2022

Shared perception is different from individual perception: a new look on context dependency

Human perception is based on unconscious inference, where sensory input ...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset