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Main Authors: Tebbe, Devin, Barkallah, Meryem, Burger, Braeden, Zytko, Douglas
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2405.05914
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author Tebbe, Devin
Barkallah, Meryem
Burger, Braeden
Zytko, Douglas
author_facet Tebbe, Devin
Barkallah, Meryem
Burger, Braeden
Zytko, Douglas
contents Virtual reality (VR) dating introduces novel opportunities for romantic interactions, but it also raises concerns about new harms that typically occur separately in traditional dating apps and general-purpose social VR environments. Given the subjectivity in which VR dating experiences can be considered harmful it is imperative to involve user stakeholders in anticipating harms and formulating preventative designs. Towards this goal with conducted participatory design workshops with 17 stakeholders identified as women and/or LGBTQIA+; demographics that are at elevated risk of harm in online dating and social VR. Findings reveal that participants are concerned with two categories of harm in VR dating: those that occur through the transition of interaction across virtual and physical modalities, and harms stemming from expectations of sexual interaction in VR.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2405_05914
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Risk of Harm in VR Dating from the Perspective of Women and LGBTQIA+ Stakeholders
Tebbe, Devin
Barkallah, Meryem
Burger, Braeden
Zytko, Douglas
Human-Computer Interaction
Virtual reality (VR) dating introduces novel opportunities for romantic interactions, but it also raises concerns about new harms that typically occur separately in traditional dating apps and general-purpose social VR environments. Given the subjectivity in which VR dating experiences can be considered harmful it is imperative to involve user stakeholders in anticipating harms and formulating preventative designs. Towards this goal with conducted participatory design workshops with 17 stakeholders identified as women and/or LGBTQIA+; demographics that are at elevated risk of harm in online dating and social VR. Findings reveal that participants are concerned with two categories of harm in VR dating: those that occur through the transition of interaction across virtual and physical modalities, and harms stemming from expectations of sexual interaction in VR.
title Risk of Harm in VR Dating from the Perspective of Women and LGBTQIA+ Stakeholders
topic Human-Computer Interaction
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2405.05914