Construction of a Validated Virtual Embodiment Questionnaire
User embodiment is important for many Virtual Reality (VR) applications, for example, in the context of social interaction, therapy, training, or entertainment. Yet, there is no commonly agreed-on or validated way to empirically measure the perception of embodiment necessary to evaluate this important quality of user experience (UX). We present a virtual embodiment questionnaire (VEQ) to assess components of virtual embodiment in a valid, reliable, and consistent fashion. We reviewed previous literature to identify applicable concepts and items and performed a confirmatory factor analysis on the data of three experiments (N = 196). Each experiment modified a distinct simulation property, namely the level of immersion, the level of personalization, and the level of behavioral realism. The analysis confirmed three factors: (1) the ownership of a virtual body, (2) the agency over a virtual body, and (3) the change in the perceived body schema. A fourth study (N = 22) further confirmed the reliability and validity of the scale and investigated the impacts of latency jitter of avatar movements presented in the simulation compared to linear latencies and a baseline. We present the final scale and further insights from the studies regarding related constructs.
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