From: Robin Hollands <R.Hollands@sheffield.ac.uk>
Subject: Re: HUMAN-FACTORS: Children, VR, and home entertainment
Date: Tue, 03 Dec 1996 17:44:58 +0000
Message-ID: <32A4671A.2C64@shef.ac.uk>
Organization: Automatic Control & Systems Engineering, University of Sheffield 


Marc Bernatchez wrote:
> I'm still waiting to see reference of articles you may have published that
> addresses the very point this whole thread was about at first... The
> influence an HMD could have on kids in their 8 to 15 years old. I'm just
> applying your own technique Robin, that is that you need publications and
> such to support your sayings and expertise in a given subject. Anyway, I
> never called myself an expert.

 Granted, but I was critisising your approach, not your findings - I
think John (definitely a published expert!) did that succinctly
enough. You may also want to check out Arthur Zwern's paper from
ECDVRAT '96 which had similiar positive conclusions.

> >Regular newsgroup readers
> >will remember that I mathematically proved Marc's 'quality of HMD'
> >measure to be fundamentally faulted a few months back (the best HMD
> >had a 0 degree field of view!).
> 
> Still totally wrong. I appreciated Robin's feedback and removed any sever
> flaws from the algorithms based on his concerns. Where did you saw the 0
> degree thing anyway Robin? |:-) 

Simple mathematical extrapolation!

 
> Robin robin, I didn't want people to agree or disagree. I just said let's be
> careful... after that, do what you want with the warning sign. I don't see
> why you and Mr. Wann felt so attacked by these light remarks I and other made.

 The reason why I (and probably John) reacted the way we do is because
we've already made it (just) through a media hate campaign triggered
off by such light remarks. A couple of years ago a law firm in London
misquoted old research in a similar way to your interpretations and
issued a press release. This was immediately followed by high profile
stories in the national media. As the misquoted source, John spent
much time fielding criticism, and as the chairman of the UK's primary
society of VR researchers, I also spent much of my time trying to
correct and calm people. The media will always pick up on a good
story, and unfortunately 'VR ruins your children's eyes' is a more
juicy headline than 'VR really isn't that bad for you after all'.

> >interesting to see if the prominent researchers back up Marc's subjective
> >arguments, but since I know much of the content already, I would not put
> >any money on it!
> 
> Robin, I'll be as happy than you if I hear that there is no such problems to
> be worried of. Like I said, I'm not trying to win any battle here. Are you?

 Anyone with facts to back up concerns about HMD safety, and concerned
to 'protect the public' should simply present their findings to their
government's safety and/or standards organisations. HMDs in Europe
will soon have to pass a barrage of ISO tests before they can be sold
within the EU, and I would be surprised if the rest of the world
didn't follow suit.

It is always easy to criticise and play on people's fears, but it does
beg the question, "How do you prove an HMD is safe?". It is relatively
easy to prove an HMD (or anything else) is unsafe, simply by
highlighting the fault. Current HMDS could be considered dangerous for
much more obvious reasons than subtle arguments about optics; what
about getting the cables wrapped around your throat?, what about
whiplash if you move to the umbilical limit a little too fast?, what
about falling over obstacles whilst blinded? etc.

Perhaps the question really should be "Are HMDs safer?". Arthur Zwern
ran some control groups in his recent trials using monitors instead of
HMDs. *If* HMDs do prove to cause eye defects, how do these compare
with use of monitors (already known to cause problems and subject to
health and safety regulations), or even reading from an early age?

I don't claim to have the answers, except that John Wann's
publications and Arthur Zwern's presentation both suggested their
wasn't a significent problem.  The last Virtual Reality World
conference in Boston had a special session dedicated to health and
safety in VR without a single paper presenting any negative
findings. I am aware of some of the early work (including John's),
including such classic studies as staring at a stationary virtual
object for a couple of hours, which produced negative
findings. However, on the whole, approaches were acknoledged to be
poor, or based upon first generation HMDS (which definitely did have
problems).

Incidentally the 'Health and Safety in Virtual Reality' conference I
was supposed to be chairing, and organised by one of the major
research labs in the UK, failed to attract any more than 10 delegates!
Given that level of interest, perhaps health and safety of VR is no
longer ackowledged by the general community as being of interest!

Cheers,

Robin
(UK VR-SIG Chairman)

Email: r.hollands@sheffield.ac.uk
WWW:  http://www.shef.ac.uk/~vrmbg/staff/rjh/rjh.html
BOOK: http://www.shef.ac.uk/~vrmbg/vrhmhb/vrhmhb.html
