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Hauptverfasser: Ortega, Francisco R., Interrante, Victoria, Lotemplio, Sara, Masters, Rachel, Nicoly, Jalynn, Borhani, Zahra, Davalos, Deana, Zielasko, Daniel
Format: Preprint
Veröffentlicht: 2024
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Online-Zugang:https://arxiv.org/abs/2411.06293
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author Ortega, Francisco R.
Interrante, Victoria
Lotemplio, Sara
Masters, Rachel
Nicoly, Jalynn
Borhani, Zahra
Davalos, Deana
Zielasko, Daniel
author_facet Ortega, Francisco R.
Interrante, Victoria
Lotemplio, Sara
Masters, Rachel
Nicoly, Jalynn
Borhani, Zahra
Davalos, Deana
Zielasko, Daniel
contents The growing demand for accessible therapeutic options has led to the exploration of Virtual Reality (VR) as a platform for forest bathing, which aims to reduce stress and improve cognitive functions. This paper brings together findings from three studies by the authors. The first study compared environments with and without plant life to examine how biomass influences stress reduction. The second study focused on the differences between low-fidelity and high-fidelity VR environments, while the third explored whether the benefits of VR forest bathing come from being immersed in realistic environments or simply from viewing something beautiful. The results showed no significant differences between environments with and without biomass, but highlighted the positive effects of high-fidelity VR environments and realistic nature over abstract art. The paper also covers how VR nature experiences may boost executive functioning and well-being in older adults and discusses the potential of generative AI to create customized VR environments. It concludes with a call for further collaborative research to refine VR forest bathing for stress relief and cognitive enhancement.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2411_06293
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Enhancing Well-Being Through Positive Technology: VR Forest Bathing
Ortega, Francisco R.
Interrante, Victoria
Lotemplio, Sara
Masters, Rachel
Nicoly, Jalynn
Borhani, Zahra
Davalos, Deana
Zielasko, Daniel
Human-Computer Interaction
The growing demand for accessible therapeutic options has led to the exploration of Virtual Reality (VR) as a platform for forest bathing, which aims to reduce stress and improve cognitive functions. This paper brings together findings from three studies by the authors. The first study compared environments with and without plant life to examine how biomass influences stress reduction. The second study focused on the differences between low-fidelity and high-fidelity VR environments, while the third explored whether the benefits of VR forest bathing come from being immersed in realistic environments or simply from viewing something beautiful. The results showed no significant differences between environments with and without biomass, but highlighted the positive effects of high-fidelity VR environments and realistic nature over abstract art. The paper also covers how VR nature experiences may boost executive functioning and well-being in older adults and discusses the potential of generative AI to create customized VR environments. It concludes with a call for further collaborative research to refine VR forest bathing for stress relief and cognitive enhancement.
title Enhancing Well-Being Through Positive Technology: VR Forest Bathing
topic Human-Computer Interaction
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2411.06293