Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10609/151820
Title: Virtual Reality as a New Approach for Risk Taking Assessment
Author: De Juan Ripoll, Carla
Soler-Dominguez, Jose Luis
Guixeres Provinciale, Jaime
Contero, Manuel
Álvarez Gutiérrez, Noemi
Alcaniz, Mariano
Citation: de-Juan-Ripoll, C. [Carla], Soler-Domínguez, J. L. [Jose Luis], Guixeres, J. [Jaime], Contero, M. [Manuel], Álvarez Gutiérrez, N. [Noemi] & Alcañiz, M. [Mariano]. (2018). Virtual reality as a new approach for risk taking assessment. Frontiers in psychology, 9, 2532. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2018.02532
Abstract: Understanding how people behave when facing hazardous situations, how intrinsic and extrinsic factors influence the risk taking (RT) decision making process and to what extent it is possible to modify their reactions externally, are questions that have long interested academics and society in general. In the spheres, among others, of Occupational Safety and Health (OSH), the military, finance and sociology, this topic has multidisciplinary implications because we all constantly face RT situations. Researchers have hitherto assessed RT profiles by conducting questionnaires prior to and after the presentation of stimuli; however, this can lead to the production of biased, non-realistic, RT profiles. This is due to the reflexive nature of choosing an answer in a questionnaire, which is remote from the reactive, emotional and impulsive decision making processes inherent to real, risky situations. One way to address this question is to exploit VR capabilities to generate immersive environments that recreate realistic seeming but simulated hazardous situations. We propose VR as the next-generation tool to study RT processes, taking advantage of the big four families of metrics which can provide objective assessment methods with high ecological validity: the real-world risks approach (high presence VR environments triggering real-world reactions), embodied interactions (more natural interactions eliciting more natural behaviors), stealth assessment (unnoticed real-time assessments offering efficient behavioral metrics) and physiological real-time measurement (physiological signals avoiding subjective bias). Additionally, VR can provide an invaluable tool, after the assessment phase, to train in skills related to RT due to its transferability to real-world situations.
Keywords: virtual reality
risk taking
occupational risks
risk attitude
risk perception
stealth assessment
psychophysiological assessment
embodiment
DOI: https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2018.02532
Document type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Version: info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Issue Date: 12-Dec-2018
Publication license: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/  
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