Bailenson Etal ImmersiveVR
Bailenson Etal ImmersiveVR
Bailenson Etal ImmersiveVR
Nicole Lundblad
Department of Symbolic Systems
Stanford University
Michael Jin
Department of Computer Science
Stanford University
This article illustrates the utility of using virtual environments to transform social
interaction via behavior and context, with the goal of improving learning in digital
environments. We first describe the technology and theories behind virtual environments and then report data from 4 empirical studies. In Experiment 1, we demonstrated that teachers with augmented social perception (i.e., receiving visual warnings alerting them to students not receiving enough teacher eye gaze) were able to
We would like to thank Roy Pea, Byron Reeves, and the Stanford LIFE lab for helpful suggestions
and Sandra Okita and Dan Schwartz for suggestions as well as for detailed comments on an earlier draft
of this article. This work was supported in part by National Science Foundation Grant 0527377.
Correspondence should be addressed to Jeremy N. Bailenson, Department of Communication,
Stanford University, 450 Serra Mall, Stanford, CA 94305-2020. E-mail: [email protected]
103
spread their attention more equally among students than teachers without augmented
perception. In Experiments 2 and 3, we demonstrated that by breaking the rules of
spatial proximity that exist in physical space, students can learn more by being in the
center of the teachers field of view (compared to the periphery) and by being closer
to the teacher (compared to farther away). In Experiment 4, we demonstrated that inserting virtual co-learners who were either model students or distracting students
changed the learning abilities of experiment participants who conformed to the virtual co-learners. Results suggest that virtual environments will have a unique ability
to alter the social dynamics of learning environments via transformed social interaction.
INTRODUCTION
Many researchers have investigated the viability of virtual environments (VEs),
digital simulations that involve representations of teachers, students, and/or content, for learning applications. In this article, we describe how VEs enable transformed social interaction (TSI), the ability of teachers and students to use digital
technology to strategically alter their online representations and contexts in order
to improve learning. We present evidence from a series of empirical studies that
demonstrate how breaking the social physics of traditional learning environments
can increase learning in VEs. Of course immersive virtual reality currently is not
yet an easily acquired technology in classroom settings. Nevertheless, VEs are becoming more common place, and it is important to understand how this digital
technology will aid the basic learning process.
In this Introduction, we first provide a discussion of the taxonomies of VEs in
general and previous implementations of learning systems in VEs. We next provide an assimilation of the literature on learning in VEs, focusing on the unique
affordances provided by VEs not possible in face-to-face settings, including explicating our theory of TSI. Finally, we provide an overview of the current experiments.
104
BAILENSON ET AL.
sound in VEs), haptic (e.g., by wearing gloves that use mechanical feedback or air
blast systems that simulate contact with object VEs), or olfactory (e.g., by wearing
a nosepiece or collar that releases different smells when a person approaches different objects in VEs).
An immersive virtual environment (IVE) is one that perceptually surrounds the
user, increasing his or her sense of presence or actually being within it. Consider a
childs video game; playing that game using a joystick and a television set is a VE.
However, if the child were to have special equipment that allowed him or her to
take on the actual point of view of the main character of the video game, that is, to
control that characters movements with his or her own movements such that the
child were actually inside the video game, then the child would be in an IVE. In
other words, in an IVE, the sensory information of the VE is more psychologically
prominent and engaging than the sensory information of the outside physical
world. For this to occur, IVEs typically include two characteristic systems. First,
the users are unobtrusively tracked physically as they interact with the IVE. User
actions such as head orientation and body position (e.g., the direction of the gaze)
are automatically and continually recorded, and the IVE, in turn, is updated to reflect the changes resulting from these actions. In this way, as a person in the IVE
moves, the tracking technology senses this movement and renders the virtual scene
to match the users position and orientation. Second, sensory information from the
physical world is kept to a minimum. For example, in an IVE that relies on visual
images, the user wears an HMD or sits in a dedicated projection room. By doing
so, the user cannot see objects from the physical world, and consequently it is easier for him or her to become enveloped by the synthetic information.
There are two important features of IVEs that will continually surface in later
discussions. The first is that IVEs necessarily track a users movements, including
body position, head direction, as well as facial expressions and gestures, thereby
providing a wealth of information about where in the IVE the user is focusing his
or her attention, what he or she observes from that specific vantage point, and what
are his or her reactions to the environment. The second is that the designer of an
IVE has tremendous control over the users experience and can alter the appearance and design of the virtual world to fit experimental goals, providing a wealth of
real-time adjustments to specific user actions.
Of course there are limitations to IVEs given current technology. The past few
years have demonstrated a sharp acceleration of the realism of VEs and IVEs.
However, the technology still has quite a long way to go before the photographic
realism and behavioral realism (i.e., gestures, intonations, facial expressions) of
avatarsdigital representations of one anotherin IVEs approach the realism
of actual people. Moreover, although technology for visual and auditory IVEs
steadily develops, systems for the other senses (i.e., haptic) are not progressing as
quickly. Consequently, it may be some years before the technology rivals a
real-world experience. And finally, some users of IVEs experience simulator sick-
105
106
BAILENSON ET AL.
ing scientific principles and hypothesis testing built using design-based research.
In River City, students interact with one another and the towns inhabitants via avatars using typed chat as they investigate and develop hypotheses regarding one of
three strains of illness in the town. The researchers identified several experiences
that exemplified neomillennial learning styles (p. 4). First, the environment created an immersive experience that allowed students to become shapers of a scientific experience rather than passive observers. Second, River City allowed students
to shed an identity of a student failing science and take on the identity of a scientist (p. 5). And finally, the immersive experience also encouraged critical thinking
by actively engaging students. It is worth noting that these three features would not
be present in systems using the first approach, because the reward structure in and
of itself does not provide these features.
A third approach has been to leverage existing online environments instead of
creating them from scratch. For example, researchers from the University of California at Los Angeles collaborated with developers of the childrens online environment Whyville to engineer a virtual pox epidemic in an attempt to increase
awareness of and learning about epidemics and vaccinations (Foley & La Torre,
2004). The pox was spread by proximity and interaction. Vaccinations could be
used to immunize against the pox, but a vaccination shortage (modeled from flu
vaccine shortages in the real world) made it impossible for every user to be immunized. Users infected with the pox would occasionally sneeze (thereby replacing
some of their typed chat), and spots would appear on their avatars faces. Researchers found that the event led to a dramatic increase in users exploring the
medical libraries in Whyville, and science topics in chat and message boards increased by 2000%. This comparatively informal approach illustrates how VEs
could be used to increase interest and inquiry in specific topic areas.
Unique Affordances of VEs for Learning
Researchers in many disciplines (e.g., the learning sciences, computer science,
psychology, communication) have studied the use of VEs for learning. The strongest case for VEs as learning modules stems from their ability to implement contexts and relationships not possible to achieve in a traditional learning setting. In
this section we review a number of the unique learning opportunities VEs provide.
Embodied agents that teach and learn. One paradigm used in learning
sciences seeks to create intelligent virtual agents who teach a learner about a specific domain (see Badler, Phillips, & Webber, 1993, for an early example; or
Moreno, in press, for a recent review). For example, Rickel and colleagues have
explored the use of virtual agents in teaching users how to perform complex mechanical tasks (Rickel & Johnson, 1998) as well as how to respond to crises in
which both emotional and cultural factors have to be considered (Hill et al., 2003).
107
The latter study is noteworthy for implementing a natural language processing interface as well as producing agents that can behave and react with a wide range of
emotional tones. A similar use of virtual agents that employ natural language processing can be found in work by Graesser, Wiemer-Hastings, Wiemer-Hastings,
and Kreuz (1999), who created a virtual tutor for teaching the fundamentals of
hardware and operating systems.
Work in this area has also explored virtual agents that encourage the construction rather than consumption of knowledge. For example, Cassell (2004) implemented a digitally augmented dollhouse that encourages children to tell stories as a
way of promoting literary competencies. It is also worth noting that the virtual
agent in this dollhouse is presented as a young boy, and thus this approach provides
a learning paradigm whereby the user perceives the agent as a same-age playmate
rather than an authoritative teacher. Similar work by Schwartz, Pilner, Biswas,
Leelawong, and Davis (in press) has shown that when agents encourage students to
teach them, learning improves as students process the information while teaching
the agents. Virtual agents not only allow a user to enter into a learning experience
at his or her own convenience, but they can also provide personalized one-on-one
learning experiences tailored to the individual that would be prohibitively expensive otherwise (Baylor & Kim, 2005).
Co-learners. Although virtual teachers allow users to learn any time any
where, one trade-off is that oftentimes users must give up the contextual environment of the classroom as well as other students. From a communities of practice
point of view (Wegner, 1998), the absence of a social group of peers is a significant
drawback to the typical individualized learning environments with virtual teachers. Indeed, students learning in social conditions (whether cooperative or competitive) outperform students in individualistic conditions (Johnson, Johnson, &
Skon, 1979). And students studying with a partner remember more factual material
than when studying alone (Wood, Willoughby, Reilly, Elliot, & DuCharme, 1995).
However, it is possible to populate a virtual learning environment with virtual
co-learners (Kim & Baylor, 2006; Lee et al., in press). Moreover, research in interactive agents (Reeves & Nass, 1996) has suggested that people may respond to behaviors of a virtual co-learner similarly to how they respond to human co-learners
in a virtual classroom. Thus, the aforementioned benefits of co-learners could conceivably be harnessed in VEs. And finally, virtual co-learners can be programmed
to behave specifically to enhance each users learning, something that cannot be
done as easily with real students in a classroom.
Of course, it may be argued that much of the benefit from co-learners is due to
dialogue or shared reasoning, an experience that is hard to create with virtual
agents. However, some research has shown that co-learners can improve learning
through their behaviors alone. In a study of virtual co-learners (Ju, Nickell, Eng, &
Nass, 2005), it was found that varying a co-learners behavior can enhance a users
108
BAILENSON ET AL.
Visualizations. VEs can provide enhanced visualizations and a range of perspectives into complex information (Salzman, Dede, Loftin, & Chen, 1999). For
example, the ability to create, alter, and rotate an architectural, engineering, or
chemical structure in real time three dimension can make it easier to understand
abstract concepts (Perdomo, Shiratuddin, Thabet, & Ananth, 2005).
In addition to providing visualizations of complex information, VEs also provide the ability to take on multiple perspectives of the same scenario. Studies have
shown that different perspectives make salient different aspects of the same environment (Ellis, Tharp, Grunwald, & Smith, 1991; Thorndike & Hayes-Roth,
1982). For example, in Thorndike and Hayes-Roths study on knowledge acquired
from maps as opposed to navigation, it was found that maps allowed people to
make better judgments of relative location and straight-line distance between objects, whereas navigation allowed people to more accurately estimate route distances. VEs can easily provide users with multiple perspectives on the same situationcentral, peripheral, birds-eye view, and so onto make different aspects of
the situation salient.
Finally, VEs can provide not only visual cues but, with the integration of other
technologies, haptic and auditory cues. These additional cues can benefit learning
in several ways. First of all, additional sensory cues provide a more realistic and
engaging learning experience (Psotka, 1996). But more important, the addition of
haptic cues allows users to acquire proficiency in activities that require eyehand
coordination, such as surgical skills. For example, a virtual training tool in surgical
drilling with haptic feedback helped users perform an analogous task in a physical
environment (Sewell et al., 2007).
Synthesis of archived behaviors. One of the great advantages of digital
VEs is that every single action that is rendered (i.e., shown to the users) must be
formally represented in order to appear to the users. Consequently, all actions performed by every single student or teacher, ranging from microbehaviors such as
nonverbal gestures to macrobehaviors such as performance on an exam, can be
constantly recorded over time. By storing and assimilating this data, VEs promise
to provide a tool to create behavioral profiles and summaries on a scale not possible face to face.
For example, Rizzo and colleagues (2000) automatically collected the gaze behavior of students in a virtual classroom via head-tracking devices and used pat-
109
110
BAILENSON ET AL.
Simulation of dangerous or expensive lessons. There is also a line of research using VEs to teach lessons that are either too expensive or too dangerous to
conduct in physical space. For example, Stansfield, Shawver, Sobel, Prasad, and
Tapia (2000) designed and tested fully immersive systems to train emergency response workers such as firefighters and bioterrorist response units. By using realistic virtual depictions of dangerous crises, learners can experience the chaos and affective stressors that are typically accompanied with actual crises. Similarly, there
have been a number of studies that have used virtual simulations to train surgeons
(see Sutherland et al., 2006, for a systematic review of this work). The advantage
of virtual surgery training simulations is that cadavers, a natural alternative, are extremely rare and expensive, whereas virtual patients, once built, are extremely
cheap to duplicate.
TSI. Recent research in the learning sciences has stressed the importance of
understanding the social aspects of digital learning environments (Allmendinger,
Troitzsch, Hesse, & Spada, 2003; Bielaczyc, 2006; Enyedy, 2003). Because CVEs
render the world separately for each user simultaneously, it is possible to interrupt
or distort the normal physics of social interaction and to render the interaction differently for each participant at the same time. In other words, the information relevant to a CVE participant is transmitted to the other participants as a stream of information that summarizes his or her current movements or actions. However, that
stream of information can be transformed on the fly and in real time for strategic purposes. The theory of TSI (Bailenson, 2006; Bailenson & Beall, 2006;
Bailenson, Beall, Loomis, Blascovich, & Turk, 2004) describes the potential of
these real-time transformations. We discuss three dimensions for transformations
during interaction: self-representation, social-sensory abilities, and social environment.
The first dimension of TSI is self-representation, the strategic decoupling of the
rendered appearance or behaviors of avatars from the actual appearance or behavior of the humans driving the avatars. Because CVE interactants can modulate the
flow of information, thereby transforming the way in which specific avatars are
rendered to others, rendered states can deviate from the actual state of the interactant. For example, in a virtual learning paradigm, it could be the case that some
students learn better with teachers who smile and some learn better with teachers
with serious faces. In a CVE, the teacher can be rendered differently to each type of
student, tailoring his or her facial expressions to each student in order to maximize
that students attention and learning.
The second dimension is transforming social-sensory abilities. These transformations complement human perceptual abilities. One example is to render invisible consultants, either algorithms or humans whose information is only visible to
particular participants in the CVEs. These consultants can either provide real-time
summary information about the attentions and movements of other interactants
111
Overview of Experiments
We report results from four preliminary experiments designed to demonstrate the
utility of CVEs for studying learning sciences. All four studies utilized the paradigm of TSI to improve learning.
In Experiment 1 we utilized a transformation of social-sensory abilities, manipulating whether participants teaching a room of virtual students received cues
warning them when any of the virtual students had been outside of the teaching
participants visual field of view. We predicted that teachers with this augmented
perception would be able to more uniformly spread their mutual gaze than teachers
with normal perception.
In Experiment 2 we utilized a transformation of social environment, specifically the location in a virtual classroom where participants sat while being presented with a verbal lesson from a virtual teacher. Because the CVE can be transformed differently for multiple learners simultaneously, it is possible for each of
two students to both sit in the same place in a virtual room (i.e., an optimal location
for learning) while believing he or she is the only student in that spot. Participants
received two learning passages, one directly in the center of the teachers visual
field of view and one in the teachers periphery. We predicted that students would
learn the passage better when sitting in the center.
Experiment 3 was a replication of Experiment 2, manipulating the distance between student and teacher instead of the angle. We predicted students sitting closer
to the teacher would learn better than students sitting farther away.
In Experiment 4 we transformed social environment by inserting virtual colearners around a participant listening to a verbal lesson from a virtual teacher. The
co-learners were either model students, paying attention to the teacher enthusiastically, or alternatively were distracting students who did not pay attention to the
teacher. We predicted that students would conform to the behaviors of the co-
112
BAILENSON ET AL.
learners and would learn more in the model student condition than the distracting
student condition.
In all four of our studies, the learning process was operationalized as a teacher
transmitting information via lecture to students who were tested on recall shortly
thereafter. There has been much discussion concerning the ability of students to
learn from traditional lectures delivered by an instructor (i.e., telling models;
Smith, 1996) compared to a more active learning process in which students interact with people and materials (i.e., constructivist models; Cobb, 1994). As a whole,
the field currently leans toward the constructivist model as the more optimal learning paradigm (see Baylor & Kitsantas, 2005, for a recent discussion). However,
some researchers have been reconsidering the role of delivering information in the
classroom. For example, Schwartz and Bransford (1998) provided evidence that
telling via lecturing can be effective if the students have preexisting, well-differentiated knowledge about a given domain. Their results demonstrated that when students were trained to form sufficiently developed categories within a topic, they
utilized lecture material effectively. More recently, Lobato, Clarke, and Ellis
(2005) proposed that telling can be reformulated if researchers focus on the function of telling rather than the form, the conceptual content of telling rather than the
procedural aspects, and the relationship of telling to other actions instead of telling
in a vacuum. Their key insight was that telling can act as a mechanism to initiate
other actions and consequently can result in effective learning if formulated properly.
In the current work, our goal is not to imply that the fundamental activity in
teaching and learning is lecture and recall. Instead, we envision the telling process
as merely a common component of many teaching approaches, including some
that also include constructivist processes. By isolating components of teaching and
learning, we are best able to test our theories of TSI in virtual reality. Ideal learning
environments of the future are likely to blend both real interactions with virtual
ones, as well as telling processes with active/constructive ones. However, before
arriving at the optimal combination of component processes, we are beginning to
test one individual component in the current work.
113
about his or her gaze behavior via the opacity of each students digital representation. The opacity level of each student was directly related to the amount of gaze
provided by the teaching participant, such that students would become increasingly translucent while out of the teachers field of view. The second variable manipulated was requirement to lecture; participants either had to talk to the students
during the length of the study, or they did not.
Participants
Forty undergraduate students (20 men and 20 women) participated in the study for
course credit or pay. There were 10 participants in each of the four between-participants conditions resulting from crossing augmented social interaction (present vs.
absent) with requirement to lecture (required vs. not required).
Materials
The virtual setting. The immersive, three-dimensional virtual classroom contained a long, slightly curved table behind which nine virtual student agents were
seated, and a podium behind which the teacher (i.e., the participant) was standing
(see Figure 1). Participants could see the student agents as well as their own torsos
(if they looked straight down). We avoided using student agents whose faces were
extremely attractive or extremely unattractive according to previously a pretested
database (Yee & Bailenson, 2007).
Head movements of virtual students. We conducted a pilot study to collect realistic-looking head movements for the nine virtual students used in this
study in order to ensure that the gazes of the students would be appropriate for the
exact seat location setup of the room. In the pilot study, 36 undergraduate students
(14 men and 22 women) listened to a recorded virtual teacher give an 8-min lecture
about the pharmaceutical industry in the same virtual learning environment as was
used in Experiment 1. Each participant was randomly assigned a seat in the classroom (out of the nine possible seats). The other eight student agents exhibited previously recorded realistic head movements. In the pilot study, 36 participant head
movement sessions of 8-min in length were recorded: four different recordings for
each of the nine seat positions. For the main study, we randomly selected one of the
recordings from the pilot study for each of the nine seating positions so that the participant teaching the lesson could see realistic head movements of the student agents.
Apparatus
Figure 2 depicts a person wearing the HMD, which allows the participant to see
and interact in the virtual world. The HMD contains a separate display monitor for
BAILENSON ET AL.
114
FIGURE 1 A birds-eye view of (A) the virtual learning environment and (B) the specific
viewpoint of a participant as he or she teaches the virtual class.
FIGURE 2 A simulated participant wearing the equipment: (1) head orientation tracking device, (2) rendering computer, (3) head-mounted display, (4) game pad used to record responses.
115
each eye (50 horizontal 38 vertical field of view with 100% binocular overlap).
The graphics system rendered the virtual scene separately for each eye (in order to
provide stereoscopic depth) at approximately 60 Hz. That is, the system redrew the
scene 60 times per second in each eye, continually updating the simulated viewpoint as a function of the participants head movements, in order to reflect the appropriate movements. The system latency, or delay between a participants movement and the resulting concomitant update in the HMD, was less than 45 ms. The
orientation of the participants head along the x, y, and z planes was tracked by a
three-axis orientation sensing system (Intersense IS250, update rate of 150 Hz).
The software used to assimilate the rendering and tracking was Vizard 2.53. Participants wore either a nVisor SX HMD that featured dual 1,280 horizontal 1,024
vertical pixel resolution panels or a Virtual Research HMD that featured dual 640
horizontal 480 vertical pixel resolution panels.
Procedure
When participants arrived at the laboratory, they were given paper instructions to
read that differed according to the experimental condition to which they had been
randomly assigned. Participants required to lecture were told they would have to
lecture verbally and nonverbally with nine virtual students for 8 min, teaching
them about certain topics, whereas participants not required to lecture were told
they would only have to interact nonverbally with the nine students. Participants in
the augmented social perception condition were told that students would fade in
and out according to how much the participants looked at them. Participants in all
four conditions were instructed that they should attempt to spread their eye gaze
equally between all nine students:
We are using this virtual reality simulation to examine how teachers use eye gaze to
engage students while teaching. Given that students learn better while receiving eye
gaze, it is helpful for teachers to spread their gaze among all of the students in a class.
In this experiment, we want you to do your best to move your head around often in order to spread your eye gaze equally between all nine students.
After participants finished reading the paper instructions, they were shown how
to wear and adjust the HMD. Once comfortable with the HMD, participants found
themselves in a classroom, standing behind a podium in front of nine empty chairs
placed behind a long, slightly curved desk (see Figure 1). When the participant indicated that he or she was ready begin, the experimenter began the experiment. At
this point, the empty chairs were filled with the virtual students. At any given moment, participants could only see about a third of the virtual students due to the
field of view of the HMD. If the participant had been assigned to teaching conditions, then prompts concerning different topics of discussion appeared in the top of
116
BAILENSON ET AL.
the field of view and changed every 30 s. The participant was required to discuss
each prompt with the students in the class. If the participant had not been assigned
the conditions to teach, then no prompts appeared. If the participant had been assigned to the augmented social perception conditions, then the student agents
changed opacity according to how much they were looked at by the participant,
with a student degrading linearly from fully opaque to fully translucent in 15 s if
kept out of the participant teachers field of view. Although the students turned
translucent, the chairs the students were sitting in remained opaque in order to ensure the teacher knew a student was supposed to be sitting there. If the participant
had not been assigned to the augmented social perception conditions, then all of
the students remained opaque the entire time. At the end of 8 min, participants removed the HMD and were thanked for their participation.
Results and Discussion
The main dependent variable was gaze inattention, or the amount of time students
were completely kept out of the teachers field of view. Figure 3 shows the percentage of time students were ignored as a function of the nine seats for the augmented
social perception condition and the nonaugmented social perception condition. We
collapsed the nine seats into the location variable: center seats (the five seats in the
middle) and periphery seats (the set of four seats defined by the two on the outside
left and the two on the outside right). We then ran an analysis of variance
(ANOVA) with location as a within-subjects variable, augmented social percep-
FIGURE 3 Mean percent inattention by the nine seat locations for each condition in Experiment 1 for the participants with and without augmented social perception. Higher numbers on
the y axis indicate more inattention. CI = confidence interval.
117
118
BAILENSON ET AL.
Design
Participants in this study were students in the exact same virtual classroom as used
in Experiment 1. Each sat in one of the learning spots, either right in the center or
on either the extreme left or right end (see Figure 4). The shape of the virtual seating arrangement was intentionally created to keep the distance between the teacher
and students the same in the two positions while varying only the angle between
the front-on position of the teacher and the student. Within subjects, we manipulated seat location; participants sat in either the center or periphery (half of the participants sat in the left periphery seat, and half sat in the right). There were two separate learning passages, one on how the human body fights fevers created by Okita
and Schwartz (2006), and one on the pharmaceutical industry. Participants re-
FIGURE 4
the center.
119
A participants view of the virtual classroom from (left) the periphery and (right)
ceived one passage from the virtual teacher in each seat, and across participants we
counterbalanced which seat they sat in first, which passage was received first, and
which passage was paired with each seat in a Latin Square design. The volume of
the audio from the teacher was kept constant at all seat locations.
Participants
Participants were 32 Stanford University students (16 women) who received $10
for their participation in this study.
Materials
There were two passages delivered verbally by the teacher. The gender of the
teacher always matched the gender of the participant, and each of the two passages
was recorded in both a male and female voice. Both the fever passage and the pharmaceutical passage were approximately 4 min long, and each had a series of multiple choice questions relating to the verbal content of the passage. The passages as
well as the multiple choice questions are listed in the Appendix.
The virtual teacher utilized prerecorded idling movements (i.e., generic default behaviors preprogrammed to look realistic) in terms of his or her arms, posture, and head, which were designed to model those of a typical teacher. Furthermore, as the virtual teacher spoke, the lips were synchronized with the volume of
the recorded passage. The other eight seats in the classroom were filled with virtual
student agents who used the same idling head movements that were collected in
the pilot study of Experiment 1. The apparatus and virtual world were identical to
those described in Experiment 1.
120
BAILENSON ET AL.
Procedure
When participants arrived at the laboratory, they were given paper instructions to
read based on the experimental condition to which they had been assigned. The instructions indicated that they would be hearing two separate verbal passages by a
virtual teacher and would be answering questions about those passages. The experimenter then instructed the participant on how to put on the HMD and use the game
pad to answer the questions (see Figure 2). When the participants indicated that
they understood the instructions, they put on the HMD and hit a button to begin the
first lesson. After the virtual teacher finished delivering the first passage, the
teacher and the students disappeared while the participant used the game pad to answer the multiple choice questions about the passage. The questions appeared one
at a time. After the participant finished answering questions about the first passage,
he or she switched seats in the virtual room, and then the teacher and the students
reappeared. The same process then repeated itself with the second passage.
Measures
Learning. We used scores for each of the multiple choice tests after each passage and report scores as percent correct. The mean score of the fever passage was
52% (SD = 22%), and the mean of the drug passage was 74% (SD = 23%). It is important to note that these scores should not be interpreted in the absolute sense, in
that there is no norm for performance given this learning material.
Gaze. We computed the percentage of the total time that the students kept the
teacher within their field of view. On average, students kept the teacher within their
field of view (i.e., some part of the teachers head was visible to them) 55% of the
time (SD = 17%).
Results and Discussion
We ran an ANOVA with learning as the dependent variable; seat (center or periphery) as a within-subjects factor; and order of seat location (center first or second),
order of passage (fever first or second), and participant gender as covariates. There
was a significant effect of seat location, F(1, 28) = 4.51, p < .05, 2 = .14, with students in the center (M = 68%, SEM = 4%) performing better than students in the periphery (M = 58%, SEM = 4%). There was also a significant effect of gender, F(1,
28) = 13.55, p < .001, 2 = .33, with men (M = 73%, SEM = 4%) performing better
than women (M = 52%, SEM = 4%). No other main effects or interactions were significant, all Fs < 1.3, all ps > .25.
We next ran an ANOVA with gaze as the dependent variable; seat (center or periphery) as a within-subjects factor; and order of seat (center first or second), order
121
of passage (fever first or second), and participant gender as covariates. The only
significant effect was an interaction between seat and order of seat, F(1, 28) = 4.94,
p < .03, 2 = .15. As Figure 5 shows (as well as post hoc examinations of 95% confidence intervals of the estimated marginal means), students ignored the teacher
most when moved to the periphery seat after sitting in the center compared to the
other three cells. None of the other main effects or interactions were significant, all
Fs < 2, all ps > .15.
In this study, we demonstrated that students learn better when sitting in front of
the teacher than when sitting in the periphery. Furthermore, there was a contrast effect, such that students sitting in the periphery after being first put in the privileged
seat looked at the teacher less often than students in all other conditions. The results from this study are similar to our previous work showing the power of teacher
gaze in virtual simulations in which we transformed teachers gaze behavior by redirecting the gaze of a single teacher directly at the eyes of two students simultaneously, thereby demonstrating more social influence for teachers who transform
their gazes than teachers who can only look at a single student at one time
(Bailenson, Beall, Blascovich, Loomis, & Turk, 2005). In this study, however, we
demonstrated that by keeping the teachers gaze constant, but reconfiguring the
spatial geometry of the room, a set of students can learn better if they are all sitting
in the center. This strategy of transforming proximity may be more effective than
using algorithms to automatically transform and redirect a teachers gaze because
the latter technique involves making head movements and gaze behavior artificial.
In contrast, transformed proximity allows a teacher to use natural, realistic head
movements but simply increases learning by allowing a number of students to be in
the privileged spot to receive those head movements simultaneously.
FIGURE 5 Mean gazes and 95% confidence intervals toward the teacher by seat location and
seat order in Experiment 2.
122
BAILENSON ET AL.
We also demonstrated a main effect of gender, such that male scores were approximately 20 points higher than female scores. We did not predict this difference, so our explanation is necessarily ad hoc. This effect may have occurred because, culturally, men tend to have much more experience using video-game-like
interfaces (Cassell & Jenkins, 1998; Yee, 2006) and consequently may have felt
more comfortable using the IVE system in the experimental setting.
EXPERIMENT 3: TRANSFORMED
PROXIMITYDISTANCE
Overview
In Experiment 3, we sought to replicate the results of increasing learning from
transforming spatial proximity via seat location from Experiment 2 by varying the
distance between the student and the teacher instead of the visual angle from the
front of the teacher. In this study, the angle between the students and the teacher
was kept constant while we manipulated the distance between the persons.
Design
Participants performed as students in the virtual classroom depicted in Figure 6.
We manipulated two variables in this study. The first, seat location, was manipulated within subjects; participants sat in two different virtual seats close (2.5 m) to
the teacher and two different virtual seats far (8.5 m) from the teacher. The 8-min
learning passage on pharmaceutical drug companies was broken into four segments. Participants received each learning segment at one of the four seats. Order
of seat location, learning passage, and pairings between the two were varied via a
Latin Square design. Each of the four learning segments was paired with specific
test questions based on the content from that portion of the passage. The second
variable, classroom population, was manipulated between subjects; either the
other virtual seats were full of virtual students exhibiting the same recorded idling
behaviors used in the previous studies, or the classroom was empty except for the
participant and the teacher. Figure 6 depicts a birds-eye view of both conditions.
Participants
Participants were 44 Stanford University students (20 women) who received $10
for their participation in this study.
Procedure
The procedure was very similar to Experiment 2, with the only difference being
that the complete 8-min passage on pharmaceutical companies was broken into
123
FIGURE 6 Different viewpoints in the virtual classroom: (A) a birds-eye view of the room layout, (B) the locations of the teacher and participants in the two distance conditions, (C) the participants viewpoint from the near position, (D) the participants viewpoint from the far position.
four, 2-min clips, and participants switched among the four seats between clips.
Participants answered questions about the passages after hearing all four of the
clips.
Materials
The virtual classroom. The virtual setting approximated a standard classroom. Students were arranged in four rows of five seats each (and desks were left
unoccupied in the empty condition). The teacher was located at the front of the
classroom behind a desk. Behind the teacher was a blackboard. To the right of
the blackboard was a screen for projections. A window that showed several
red-brick buildings in a campus-like setting was located to the left of the students
(see Figure 6).
124
BAILENSON ET AL.
Measures
The learning score was based on how well participants did on questions designed
to test the specific content from the 2-min segments for each seat. We generated
four questions for each of the two segments, and we computed a percentage correct
for each participant based on his or her results from close seats and results from far
seats. The questions are listed in the Appendix. The average learning score was .77
(SD = .13).
Results and Discussion
We ran a repeated measures ANOVA with distance (close vs. far) as a within-subjects factor, occupancy of the classroom (full vs. empty) as a between-subjects factor, participant gender and order of seat location (close first vs. far first) as
covariates, and lecture score as a dependent variable. There was a main effect of
distance, F(1, 40) = 6.80, p = .01, 2 = .13. Participants learned more information
from the lecture when they were close to the teacher (M = .77, SE = .04) than when
they were far from the teacher (M = .74, SE = .04).
There was also a significant interaction between order of seat location and distance, F(1, 40) = 5.36, p = .03, 2 = .10, as illustrated in Figure 7. Again, we observed a contrast effect such that students learned better when sitting close to the
teacher (i.e., the privileged seat) after they had sat in the far seat. None of the other
interactions were significant, Fs < .70, ps > .45. In sum, although there was a small
main effect of distance of about three percentage points, this difference became
magnified after students contrasted a seat position with their previous position;
FIGURE 7
ment 3.
Mean test scores and 95% confidence intervals by seat and seat order in Experi-
125
specifically, performance improved most when they moved from the far seat to the
close seat.
The results of both Experiments 2 and 3 were surprising, given that our manipulations occurred within subjects. Conventional wisdom indicates that students tend
to select their spot in the classroom; some like the back of the room, some like the
front. In the current studies, we demonstrated that, on average, students do learn
better in specific privileged seats. The possibilities of transforming proximity during learning via CVEs are not negligibleeven with relatively small effect sizes.
Considering a class of 100, if each student can occupy the privileged seat, then
small shifts in percentages may make considerable differences in terms of the
group as a whole.
EXPERIMENT 4: TRANSFORMED CONFORMITY
Overview
Conformity is one of the most powerful aspects of social influence (Asch, 1955;
Festinger, 1954). Previous research in CVEs (Blascovich et al., 2002; Swinth &
Blascovich, 2002) has demonstrated that participants conform to the behaviors of
other people in immersive virtual reality, regardless of whether they are avatars (representations controlled by other people) or agents (representations controlled by the
computer). In the current study, we examined the effect of populating a virtual classroom with co-learners (Ju et al., 2005) who exhibited either positive or negative
learning behaviors and then examined the change in behaviors by the participants.
The goal of the study was to determine if presenters are able to accomplish social influence goals by creating a specific type of audience via transformed conformity.
Design
According to a between-subjects design, participants were randomly assigned to a
classroom in one of three conformity conditions: (a) positive, (b) negative, or (c)
empty (control). In the positive condition, other agents in the classroom were attentive and focused their gazes on the teacher. In the negative condition, other
agents in the classroom appeared distracted and did not pay attention to the
teacher. In the control condition, there were no other virtual students. The participants listened to a teacher present a 4-min passage about pharmaceutical companies and then completed a test on the material presented.
Participants
Eighty-two undergraduate students participated in the study for course credit or for
pay. Participants were split equally in terms of gender as well as assignment to the
three conditions.
126
BAILENSON ET AL.
Materials
The virtual classroom. The room in this study was identical to the one used
in Experiment 3 (depicted in Figure 6). We also added an intermittent distracting
event to the setting. Four times over the course of the lecture, cars of different colors, which were visible through the classroom window, drove past outside the
classroom. When a car appeared, it was accompanied by the sound of a car engine.
In order to see the car, participants had to turn their gazes away from the teacher to
see the distracting event (cf. Rizzo et al., 2000).
Virtual co-learner behaviors. In the positive conformity condition, virtual
students in the classroom cycled through a set of animations interspersed with periods of neutral idling behavior. This set of animations included (a) looking at the
teacher, (b) nodding, (c) taking notes, and (d) not turning their heads toward the
distracting event outside the window. In the negative conformity condition, the
agents cycled through a different set of animations that included (a) looking at their
watches, (b) shaking their heads in disagreement, (c) allowing their gazes to drift
around the classroom, and (d) looking outside when the distracting event occurred.
Apparatus. The apparatus used in this experiment was the same as that described for the previous studies.
Procedure
After receiving appropriate experiment descriptions, participants were told by an
experimenter that they would be placed in an IVE to listen to an instructors short
presentation in a classroom setting. Participants were also told that they would be
answering questions about this presentation later on in this study. The experimenter then showed the participant how to wear the HMD.
After participants adjusted their HMDs for optimum focus and height, the experimenter triggered the start of the study and participants found themselves
seated in a classroom as described earlier (always the seat marked with the X in
Figure 8). The virtual teacher began the prerecorded passage on the pharmaceutical industry, using the same nonverbal behaviors as in the previous studies.
At the end of the passage, participants were taken out of the VE and asked to answer the multiple choice questions on a computer via a Web-based format. Answer
choices were selected using the mouse in the form of radio.
Measures
Lecture score. We calculated a learning score based on the number of questions participants answered correctly. Overall, the average accuracy ratio was .70
(SD = .17).
127
FIGURE 8 (A) The participants view out the window. (B) A birds-eye view of the classroom with an X denoting the student location. (C) The participants view of the teacher.
Room score. Participants were also asked about minor details of the virtual
setting as a way of ascertaining their spread of attention. There were three multiple
choice recognition questions about different aspects of the VE: color of the cars,
location of the clock, and how many times cars went by. Overall, the average accuracy ratio was .60 (SD = .25).
Gaze. We calculated the percentage of time participants had the teacher
agent in their field of view. The mean gaze percentage was .65 (SD = .16).
BAILENSON ET AL.
128
FIGURE 9
We next ran an ANOVA with gaze as the dependent variable, conformity condition as a between-subjects factor, and participant gender as a covariate. There were
no significant main effects or interactions, all Fs < 1.5, all ps > .25.
In this study, we demonstrated that the behaviors of virtual co-learners change the
pattern of learning by participants in the virtual classroom. However, the strongest
improvement in memory for lecture material occurred not from populating the room
with idealized students, but instead from emptying the room. This suggests that an
effective transformation in a CVE scenario may be simply not rendering other students in the room. In other words, by giving every student in a class of 100 the perception that he or she is receiving a one-on-one tutorial by the teacher may lead to the
best learning overall as a set. There may be contexts in which having co-learners is
essential, for example in collaborative problem-solving tasks or during test taking,
when social facilitation effects might occur. However, within the very basic telling
paradigm of learning examined in the current study, transforming social context to
actually remove other learners from the classroom may have been optimal.
GENERAL DISCUSSION
These initial studies demonstrate that using digital transformations of teachers and
learners in CVEs can increase learning compared to no transformations in the
129
130
BAILENSON ET AL.
to begin for CVEs due to the ease of implementing the materials in that manner, we
agree that this one learning component in no way approximates the entire holistic
learning process. In future studies, we plan to test various combinations of learning
componentsmixing physical and digital environments as well as passive and active learning processesin order to slowly isolate the optimal pattern of learning
components that exist in a world that includes learning via digital media. Similarly,
we need to test the various components by examining different types of learning
content; different types of nonverbal gestures and social behaviors; and different
types of social contexts, ranging from the formality of the learning environment
(Bransford et al., in press) to the physical shape configuration and size (Sharon,
2003) of the virtual classrooms. The utility of our various learning components
may vary drastically as a function of these larger contexts. Also, our studies did not
take into account students natural preferences for seating locations. An intriguing
question is whether students who naturally prefer the less optimal locations would
learn more or less when forced to be in the more optimal locations. It is also important to point out that our studies relied on short-term, single-trial tasks and that different patterns quickly emerge over time. Finally, given the novelty of using IVEs,
the findings from the current studies may not generalize to learning environments
that are not so reliant on extravagant technology. A thorough examination of the
theoretical constructs examined in the current work using technology that is more
accessible for classrooms is essential. Moreover, the small and unrepresentative
sample size of the current study should be addressed in future work before generalizations are made.
The potential for future work examining the effects of TSI in CVEs is striking.
The possibility of both teachers and students to transform their appearance and behaviors, their perceptual abilities, and the social context of a classroom present
promising opportunities. In previous work we demonstrated that, in CVEs, one
person can automatically and implicitly mimic the nonverbal behaviors of others
(Bailenson & Yee, 2005), and by doing so can capture the attention of an audience
and become more persuasive. In a virtual learning scenario, a teacher who differentially mimics each student in a class of 100 simultaneously should be extraordinarily effective. The ability to filter in real time, appearance, behaviors, contexts,
and even the fundamental aspects (i.e., race, gender, etc.) of peoples identity
should provide learning scientists with tools that were difficult to imagine decades
ago (Loomis, Blascovich, & Beall, 1999).
Of course, one must consider the ethics and morality of such a research paradigm. It is a fine line between strategic transformations and outright deception. In face-to-face scenarios, teachers must often mask their emotions; for example, smiling at students when they are in fact extremely upset or praising
students who deliver less-than-stellar responses. TSI is not qualitatively different from putting a mask over the true expressed emotional state of the teacher.
However, the quantitative deviation from physical reality via TSI does provide
131
REFERENCES
Allmendinger, K., Troitzsch, H., Hesse, F. W., & Spada, H. (2003). Nonverbal signs in virtual environments. The effects of nonverbal signs on communication and collaboration in a 3D virtual environment. In B. Wasson, S. Ludvigsen, & U. Hoppe (Eds.), Designing for change in network learning environments (pp. 431440). Dordrecht, Germany: Kluwer Academic Publishers.
Argyle, M. (1988). Bodily communication (2nd ed.). London: Methuen.
Asch, S. (1955). Opinions and social pressure. Scientific American, 193, 5.
Badler, N., Phillips, C., & Webber, B. (1993). Simulating humans: Computer graphics, animation, and
control. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press.
Bailenson, J., Beall, A., Loomis, J., Blascovich, J., & Turk, M. (2004). Transformed social interaction:
Decoupling representation from behavior and form in collaborative virtual environments. Presence:
Teleoperators and Virtual Environments, 13, 428441.
Bailenson, J., & Blascovich, J. (2004). Avatars. In W. S. Bainbridge (Ed.), Encyclopedia of human-computer interaction. (pp. 6468). Barrington, MA: Berkshire Publishing Group.
Bailenson, J. N. (2006). Transformed social interaction in collaborative virtual environments. In P.
Messaris & L. Humphreys (Eds.), Digital media: Transformations in human communication (pp.
255264). New York: Lang.
Bailenson, J. N., & Beall, A. C. (2006). Transformed social interaction: Exploring the digital plasticity
of avatars. In R. Schroeder & A. Axelsson (Eds.), Avatars at work and play: Collaboration and interaction in shared virtual environments (pp. 116). London: Springer-Verlag.
Bailenson, J. N., Beall, A. C., Blascovich, J., Loomis, J., & Turk, M. (2005). Transformed social interaction, augmented gaze, and social influence in immersive virtual environments. Human Communication Research, 31, 511537.
Bailenson, J. N., Blascovich, J., Beall, A. C., & Loomis, J. M. (2003). Interpersonal distance in
immersive virtual environments. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 29, 115.
132
BAILENSON ET AL.
Bailenson, J. N., Garland, P., Iyengar, S., & Yee, N. (2006). Transformed facial similarity as a political
cue: A preliminary investigation. Political Psychology, 27, 373386.
Bailenson, J. N., & Yee, N. (2005). Digital chameleons: Automatic assimilation of nonverbal gestures
in immersive virtual environments. Psychological Science, 16, 814819.
Bailenson, J. N., & Yee, N. (2006). A longitudinal study of task performance, head movements, subjective report, simulator sickness, and transformed social interaction in collaborative virtual environments. Presence: Teleoperators and Virtual Environments, 15, 699716.
Barab, S., Thomas, M., Dodge, T., Carteaux, R., & Tuzun, H. (2005). Making learning fun: Quest
Atlantis, a game without guns. Educational Technology Research and Development, 53, 86107.
Barab, S. A., Hay, K. E., Barnett, M. G., & Squire, K. (2001). Constructing virtual worlds: Tracing the
historical development of learner practices/understandings. Cognition and Instruction, 19(1), 4794.
Baylor, A. L., & Kim, Y. (2005). Simulating instructional roles through pedagogical agents. International Journal of Artificial Intelligence in Education, 15(1), 95115.
Baylor, A. L., & Kitsantas, A. (2005). Comparative analysis and validation of instructivist and
constructivist self-reflective tools (IPSRT and CPSRT) for novice instructional planners. Journal of
Technology for Teacher Education, 13, 431455.
Beall, A., Bailenson, J., Loomis, J., Blascovich, J., & Rex, C. (2003, June). Non-zero-sum mutual gaze
in collaborative virtual environments. Paper presented at the Proceedings of HCI International,
2003, Crete, Greece.
Bielaczyc, K. (2006). Designing social infrastructure: Critical issues in creating learning environments
with technology. Journal of Learning Sciences, 15, 301329
Blascovich, J., Loomis, J., Beall, A., Swinth, K., Hoyt, C., & Bailenson, J. (2002). Immersive virtual
environment technology as a methodological tool for social psychology. Psychological Inquiry, 13,
103124.
Bransford, J. D., Vye, N. J., Stevens, R., Kuhl, P., Schwartz, D., Bell, P., et al. (2005). Learning theories
and education: Toward a decade of synergy. In P. Alexander & P. Winne (Eds.), Handbook of educational psychology (Vol. 2) (pp. 209244). Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum.
Cassell, J. (2004). Towards a model of technology and literacy development: Story listening systems.
Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology, 25, 75105.
Cassell, J., & Jenkins, H. (1998). From Barbie to Mortal Kombat: Gender and computer games. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Clark, H. (1996). Using language. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press.
Clark, H. H., & Brennan, S. E. (1991). Grounding in communication. In L. B. Resnick, J. Levine, & S.
D. Teasley (Eds.), Perspectives on socially shared cognition (pp. 127149). Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.
Clarke, J., & Dede, C. (2005, April). Making learning meaningful: An exploratory study of using
multi-user environments (MUVEs) in middle school science. Presentation at the annual meeting of
the American Educational Research Association, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Cobb, P. (1994). Constructivism in mathematics and science education. Educational Researcher, 23(7),
1320.
Dede, C., Nelson, B., Ketelhut, D., Clarke, J., & Bowman, C. (2004). Design-based research
strategies for studying situated learning in a multi-user virtual environment. In Y. Kafai, W.
Sandoval, N. Enyedy, A. Nixon, & F. Herrera (Eds.) Proceedings of the Sixth International
Conference of the Learning Sciences (pp. 158165). Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum.
Ellis, S. R., Tharp, G. K., Grunwald, A. J., & Smith, S. (1991). Exocentric judgments in real environments and stereoscopic displays. In Proceedings of the 35th annual meeting of the Human Factors
Society (pp. 14421446). Santa Monica, CA: Human Factors Society.
Enyedy, J. (2003). Knowledge construction and collective practice: At the intersection of learning, talk,
and social configurations in a computer-mediated mathematics classroom. Journal of the Learning
Sciences, 12, 361407.
133
134
BAILENSON ET AL.
Ottenson, J. P., & Otteson, C. R. (1979). Effect of teachers gaze on childrens story recall. Perceptual
and Motor Skills, 50, 3542.
Pea, R. D. (2006). Video-as-data and digital video manipulation techniques for transforming learning
sciences research, education and other cultural practices. In J. Weiss, J. Nolan, & P. Trifonas (Eds.),
International handbook of virtual learning environments (pp. 13211393). Dordrecht, The Netherlands: Kluwer Academic.
Perdomo, J., Shiratuddin, M., Thabet, W., & Ananth, A. (2005 May/June). Interactive 3D visualization
as a tool for construction education. Paper presented at the ITHET 6th Annual International Conference, Puerto Rico, Dominican Republic: Information Technology Based Higher Education &
Training.
Psotka, J. (1996). Immersive training systems: Virtual reality and education and training. Instructional
Science, 23, 405423.
Reeves, B., & Nass, C. (1996). The media equation: How people treat computers, television and new
media like real people and places. New York: Stanford University, Center for the Study of Language
and Information.
Rickel, J., & Johnson, L. W. (1998). STEVE: A pedagogical agent for virtual reality. In K. P. Sycara &
M. Woolridge (Eds.), Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference on Antonomens Agents
(Agents 98) (pp. 332333). New York: ACM Press
Rizzo, A. A., Buckwalter, J. G., Bowerly, T., van der Zaag, C., Humphrey, L., Neumann, U., et al.
(2000). The virtual classroom: A virtual environment for the assessment and rehabilitation of attention deficits. Journal of Cyberpsychology and Behavior, 3, 483500.
Roschelle, J., Pea, R. D., & Sipusic, M. (1989, April). Design of a tool for video analysis. Proceedings
of the Association for Computing Machinery, Special Interest Group on Computer-Human Interaction Workshop on Video as a Research and Design Tool, Cambridge, MA.
Salzman, M., Dede, C., Loftin, R., & Chen, J. (1999). A model for understanding how virtual reality aids complex conceptual learning. Presence: Teleoperators and Virtual Environments, 8,
293316.
Schwartz, D. L., & Bransford, J. D. (1998). A time for telling. Cognition and Instruction, 16, 475522.
Schwartz, D. L., Pilner, K. B., Biswas, G., Leelawong, K., & Davis, J. (2007). Animations of thought:
Interactivity in the teachable agents paradigm. In R. Lowe & W. Schnotz (Eds.), Learning with animation: Research and implications for design (pp. 114140). Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press.
Sewell, C., Blevins, N., Peddamatham, S., Tan, H. Z., Morris, D., & Salisbury, K. (2007, March). The
effect of virtual haptic training on real surgical drilling proficiency. Paper presented at IEEE World
Haptics Conference, Tsukuba, Japan.
Sharon, S. (2003). Large classes, small groups: A social systems approach. In R. M. Gillies & A. F.
Ashman (Eds.), Co-operative learning: The social and intellectual outcomes of learning in groups
(pp. 210223). New York: Routledge.
Sherwood, J. V. (1987). Facilitative effects of gaze upon learning. Perceptual and Motor Skills, 64,
12751278.
Short, J., Williams, E., & Christie, B. (1976). The social psychology of telecommunications. London: Wiley.
Slater, M. (1999). Measuring presence: A response to the Witmer and Singer Presence Questionnaire.
Presence: Teleoperators and Virtual Environments, 8, 560565.
Smith, J. P. (1996). Efficacy and teaching mathematics by telling: A challenge for reform. Journal for
Research in Mathematics Education, 27, 387402.
Stansfield, S., Shawver, D., Sobel, A., Prasad, M., & Tapia, L. (2000). Design and implementation of a
virtual reality system and its application to training medical first responders. Presence: Teleoperators and Virtual Environments, 9, 524556.
Sutherland, L. M., Middleton, P., Anthony, A., Hamdorf, J., Cregan, P., Scott, D., et al. (2006). Surgical
simulation: A systematic review. Annals of Surgery, 243, 291300.
135
Swinth, K., & Blascovich, J. (2002, October). Perceiving and responding to others: Human-human and
human-computer social interaction in collaborative virtual environments. Presentation at the 5th
Annual International Workshop on Presence, Porto, Portugal.
Thorndike, P. W., & Hayes-Roth, B. (1982). Differences in spatial knowledge acquired from maps and
navigation. Cognitive Psychology, 14, 560589.
van der Veer, G. C., & Gale, C. (Eds.), Extended abstracts proceedings of the 2005 conference on human factors in computing systems, CHI 2005, Portland, OR, April 2-7, 2005.
Wegner, E. (1998). Communities of practice: Learning, meaning, and identity. Cambridge, England:
Cambridge University Press.
Welch, R. B. (1999). How can we determine if the sense of presence affects task performance? Presence: Teleoperators and Virtual Environments, 8, 574577.
Wellens, A. R. (1987). Heart-rate changes in response to shifts in interpersonal gaze from liked and disliked others. Perceptual & Motor Skills, 64, 595598.
Witmer, B. G., & Singer, J. M. (1998). Measuring presence in virtual environments: A presence questionnaire. Presence: Teleoperators and Virtual Environments, 7, 225240.
Wood, E., Willoughby, T., Reilly, S., Elliot, S., & Ducharme, M. (1995). Evaluating students acquisition of factual material when studying independently or with a partner. British Journal of Educational Psychology, 65, 237247.
Yee, N. (2006). The psychology of MMORPGs: Emotional investment, motivations, relationship formation, and problematic usage. In R. Schroeder & A. Axelsson (Eds.), Avatars at work and play:
Collaboration and interaction in shared virtual environments (pp. 187207). London: SpringerVerlag.
Yee, N., & Bailenson, J. (2006, August). Walk a mile: The impact of direct perspective-taking on the reduction of negative stereotyping in immersive virtual environments. Presentation at the 9th Annual
International Workshop on Presence, Cleveland, OH.
Yee, N., & Bailenson, J. N. (2007). The proteus effect: Self transformations in virtual reality. Human
Communication Research, 33, 271290.
Zahorik, P., & Jenison, R. L. (1998). Presence as being-in-the-world. Presence: Teleoperators and Virtual Environments, 7, 7889.
APPENDIX
Pharmaceutical and fever passages with corresponding multiple choice questions. Answers are italicized.
Pharmaceutical Passage
Im going to be talking to you about something that I think almost all Americans
are concerned about these days: the pharmaceutical industry and, in particular, the
high prices it charges and the justifications it gives for charging those high prices.
This year Americans will spend about $250 billion on prescription drugs, making
them the fastest-growing component of our health care bill, which itself is growing
very rapidly. The skyrocketing expenditures on prescription drugs are partly a matter of greater overall use more people are taking more drugsbut its mainly a
matter of increasing prices. New drugs are almost always priced higher than old
136
BAILENSON ET AL.
ones, and once on the market, for the drugs that are most commonly used, the
prices are jacked up, usually at about three times the inflation rate, so its unsustainable. Most Americans have insurance that covers at least part of drug costs, but
not everyone. Medicare, for example, does not have a prescription drug benefit yet
(and Ill say more about that benefit later) so that Medicare recipients who do not
have supplementary insurance have to pay for their prescription drugs out of
pocket. And, in one of its more perverse practices, the pharmaceutical industry
charges much more for people who dont have insurance than they do for people
who have large insurance companies to bargain for lower prices or rebates. In
2002, senior citizens paid, on average, $1,500 per year for the drugs that they took,
and if they took six drugs, which is not rare for an older person, they had a bill of
$9,000 a year. Not many senior citizens have such deep pockets. In fact, a recent
survey showed that one-third of senior citizens either did not get their prescriptions
filled in the first place, or if they did get them filled, didnt take the full dose but
played out the dose to make the drugs last longer. In recent years there has begun to
be a public outcry about this, probably stimulated in large part by the knowledge
that you can buy exactly the same drugs in Canada for about half the price. This has
caused people to look very carefully at the pharmaceutical industry. Still, the industry has been remarkably successful in dampening any serious move toward
price regulation. Witness, for example, the Medicare prescription drug benefit that
Congress passed late last year; it will go into effect in 2006. That bill actually contains a provision that explicitly prohibits Medicare from using its bulk purchasing
power to bargain for lower prices with drug companies. Thats quite a provision. It
makes, first of all, prescription drugs unique in the Medicare system. Medicare
does regulate doctors fees, Medicare does regulate hospital paymentsbut prescription drugs are off the table. Drug companies can continue to charge whatever
the traffic will bear, and it will bear quite a lot. How does the pharmaceutical industry justify its high prices? What it says, what it would like you to believe, is that the
high prices are necessary to cover their high research and development costs,
which implies that they spend most of their money on research and development
and that afterwards they have very little left overenough for modest profits but
not much more than that; theyre just getting by. They also make the argument that
they are a highly innovative industry and they need the high prices as a spiritual incentive for their innovation. They say that any form of price regulation would
choke off the stream of miracle drugs that they are turning out, so dont mess with
us. A part of this argument is the implication that this is somehow a peculiarly
American industry, that the pharmaceutical industry is an example of the success of
our free enterprise system. Other countries have drug price regulation; we dont, and
therefore this industry is an American industry that is especially innovative and successful because there is no price regulation. Thats impliedits not stated exactly,
but its implied. What they are saying with these arguments is, You get your moneys
worth. Just shut up. Pay up. You get your moneys worthis that true? Do you get
137
your moneys worth? The reality of this industry is very different from the image it
tries to portray in its public relations. There is a huge rhetoric reality gap.
1) According to the speaker, increases in prescription drug spending are primarily
based on increases in:
people taking drugs
drugs available
drug prices
the aging population
2) According to the speaker, prices charged by the pharmaceutical industry vary.
People without health insurance pay less for drugs than people with insurance.
Insurance companies pay more for drugs than individuals without health insurance.
The pharmaceutical industry charges people without insurance more for drugs.
People without health insurance bargain for lower prices or rebates.
3) According to a survey cited by the speaker, one-third of senior citizens:
do not get their prescriptions filled or take less than a full dose to make the drugs
last longer
take six drugs which can cost up to $9000 per year
buy their drugs from Canada in order to pay lower prices
rely on Medicare to subsidize their drug purchases
4) According to the speaker, buying drugs in Canada:
is illegal
substantially decreases the incentive of US pharmaceutical companies
can cut costs of the drug by half
is encouraged by a bill passed in Congress
5) According to the speaker, the Medicare prescription drug benefit:
encourages Medicare to bargain for lower drug prices
prevents Medicare from using its bulk purchasing power
prevents low income seniors from spending over $300 a month on drugs
encourages drug companies to lower prices for Medicare recipients
6) According to the speaker, the pharmaceutical industry claims that high prices
for drugs are necessary in order:
to enable the effective marketing of new innovative drugs
to compensate shareholders for their investments
to pay the pensions of an increasing number of retired workers
to cover high research and development costs
138
BAILENSON ET AL.
Fever Passage
Many people worry when they get a fever. But, a fever can be a good thing. It
means the immune system is working to kill an infection. A fever means the body
is hot, and the heat helps to kill pathogens. Pathogens include things like bacteria
and viruses. The brain has a region called the hypothalamus. The nerve cells inside the hypothalamus create a set point that determines how hot the body gets.
When the set point rises, it causes the body to get hotter. The set point rises when
pathogens invade the body. The way this works is that a persons immune system
can detect when there are unusual organisms in the blood. The immune system
releases macrophages that attack the pathogens. The macrophages are cells that
float in the blood. Macrophages also produce a chemical called, IL-1. When IL-1
reaches the hypothalamus, it causes the set point to rise. IL-1 tells the hypothalamus that the body is in a state of emergency, and that the temperature must be
raised a few degrees to kill the pathogens. This causes the body to run a fever.
What processes cause the body to increase its temperature? One process involves
vascularization near the skin. Vascularization means the veins (blood vessels)
shrink. When veins shrink it means that less blood can get near the skin, and
therefore, the blood cannot release as much heat through the skin. Vascularization helps explain why people can have a fever but still feel cold in their
hands and feet. There is less blood near the skin. A second process involves shivering. Shivering makes the muscles move. When muscles move, they produce
heat. Shivering can make the body produce more heat than normal. A third process is piloerection. Pilo means hair, and erection means stand up right. Piloerection causes the small hairs on the body to stand up. Piloerection closes the pores
in the skin and makes the hairs stand up. This means less heat can escape through
the pores. It also means that less sweat can escape through the skin. This is im-
139
portant because sweating is a cooling mechanism and fever is the bodys way of
increasing the temperature, not decreasing it. Piloerection also helps explain why
a fever causes a persons skin to feel tender. The little hairs get rubbed and irritate
the skin. The hypothalamus also releases a chemical called the thyrotropin releasing hormone (TRH). TRH, in turn, causes the release of another chemical
called the thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH). TSH increases the metabolism of
various tissues in the body. A higher metabolism means that tissues use up energy faster, and this causes them to produce more heat. The higher metabolism
helps to explain why people have rapid breathing and a rapid heart rate when they
have a fever. The tissues with an increased metabolism need more blood and oxygen than usual. If the body gets too hot, it will begin to kill its own cells. How
does the body stop from getting too hot? When the body temperature reaches the
set point in the hypothalamus, all the processes reverse. Blood goes to the skin,
shivering stops, piloerection ends, and the hypothalamus stops the production of
TRH. Aspirin and Tylenol help reduce a fever by blocking IL-1 from reaching the
hypothalamus. This helps to bring down the set point, so the body stops trying to
heat up. The good part of aspirin is that it makes one feel better. The bad part is
that there is less fever to help kill the pathogens.
1) According to the passage, your hands and feet get cold when you have a fever
because
your veins shrink
there is more blood near your skin
of the effects of IL-1
the small hairs on your body stand up
none of the above
2) Which of the following is not a process that causes the body to increase its
temperature?
piloconstriction
vascularization
macrophage-activation
shivering
both a and c
3) What does Aspirin/Tylenol do?
increase a fever
block IL-1 from reaching the hypothalamus
increase the set point so the body stops trying to heat up
reduce vascularization
both b and d
140
BAILENSON ET AL.
141