‘Who is this body?’ – A qualitative user study on ‘The Machine to be Another’ as a virtual embodiment system

Like no other medium, virtual reality (VR) offers new possibilities to alter the perception of reality. These possibilities are mainly related to the feeling of presence in a virtual environment. With the VR performance ‘The Machine to be Another’ (TMTBA), we find an innovative embodiment system tha...

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Auteurs: Harth, Jonathan 1980- (Auteur) ; Brücher, Maximilian (Auteur) ; Gottschalk, Hanna (Auteur) ; Hartwig, Ann-Danielle (Auteur) ; Holkin, Erwin (Auteur) ; Kost, Nele (Auteur) ; Schäfermeyer, Bernhard (Auteur)
Type de support: Électronique Article
Langue:Anglais
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Publié: Rhodes University 2020
Dans: The Indo-Pacific journal of phenomenology
Année: 2020, Volume: 20, Numéro: 1
Sujets / Chaînes de mots-clés standardisés:B Réalité virtuelle / Embodiment
RelBib Classification:AB Philosophie de la religion
VA Philosophie
ZG Sociologie des médias; médias numériques; Sciences de l'information et de la communication
Sujets non-standardisés:B Phenomenology
B ‘The Machine to be Another’
B body swap
B Selfhood
B Qualitative Study
B zero point
B Embodiment
B Virtual Reality
B Body schema
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Description
Résumé:Like no other medium, virtual reality (VR) offers new possibilities to alter the perception of reality. These possibilities are mainly related to the feeling of presence in a virtual environment. With the VR performance ‘The Machine to be Another’ (TMTBA), we find an innovative embodiment system that enables a virtual body swap between two users. Hence, we conceptualise the performance as some kind of breaching experiment in order to alter self- and body perception. With the use of TMTBA and a qualitative research approach, we hope to gain a closer insight into the formation, alteration and persistence of body images. This challenges the phenomenological idea that our sense of bodily presence is essentially anchored in our physical or ‘objective’ body as we know it and seems to potentially expand our notion of what bodily presence can mean.
ISSN:1445-7377
Contient:Enthalten in: The Indo-Pacific journal of phenomenology
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1080/20797222.2020.1857953