Abstract
Each year thousands of pedestrian get killed in road accidents and millions are non-fatally injured. Many of these involve children and occur when crossing at or between intersections. It is more difficult for children to understand, assess and predict risky situations, especially in settings that they don’t have that much experience in, such as in a city. Virtual Reality has been used to simulate situations that are too dangerous to practice in real life and has proven to be advantageous when used in training, aiming at improving skills. This paper presents a road-crossing application that simulates a pedestrian crossing found in a city setting. Children have to evaluate all given pieces of information (traffic lights, cars crossing, etc.) and then try to safely cross the road in a virtual environment. A VR CAVE is used to immerse children in the city scene. User experience observations were made so as to identify the factors that seem to affect children’s performance. Results indicate that the application was well received as a learning tool and that gender; immersion and traffic noise seem to affect children’s performance.
Chapter PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
References
Zeedyk, M.S., Wallace, L., Carcary, B., Jones, K., Larter, K.: Children and road safety: Increasing knowledge does not improve behaviour. British Journal of Educational Psychology 71, 573–594 (2001)
Connelly, M., Conaglen, H., Parsonson, B., Isler, R.: Child pedestrian’s crossing gap thresholds. Accident Analysis and Prevention 30(4), 443–453 (1998)
Dunbar, G., Hill, R., Lewis, V.: Children’s attentional skills and road behaviour. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied 7(3), 227–234 (2001)
Whitebread, D., Neilson, K.: The contribution of visual search strategies to the development of pedestrian skills by 4-11 year-old children. British Journal of Educational Psychology 70, 539–557 (2000)
Tabibi, Z., Pfeffer, K.: Finding a safe place to cross the road: the effect of distractors and the role of attention in children’s identification of safe and dangerous road-crossing sites. Inf. Child Develop. 16, 193–206 (2007)
McComas, J., MacKay, M., Picik, J.: Effectiveness of virtual reality for teaching pedestrian safety. Cyber Psychology & Behavior 5(3), 185–190 (2002)
Thomson, J.A., Tolmie, A.K., Foot, H.C., Whelan, K.M., Sarvary, P., Morrison, S.: Influence of Virtual Reality Training on the Roadside Crossing Judgments of Child Pedestrians. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied 11(3), 175–186 (2005)
Schwebel, D.C., Gaines, J., Severson, J.: Validation of virtual reality as a tool to understand and prevent child pedestrian injury. Accident Analysis and Prevention 40, 1394–1400 (2008)
Andrews, M.A.W.: How does background noise affect our concentration? Scientific American (January/ February 2010), http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=ask-the-brains-background-noise
Felnhofer, A., Kothgassner, O.D., Beutl, L., Hlavacs, H., Kryspin-Exner, I.: Is virtual reality made for men only? Exploring gender differences in the sense of presence. In: Proceedings of the International Society on Presence Research, pp. 103–112 (2012)
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2014 Springer International Publishing Switzerland
About this paper
Cite this paper
Tzanavari, A., Matsentidou, S., Christou, C.G., Poullis, C. (2014). User Experience Observations on Factors That Affect Performance in a Road-Crossing Training Application for Children Using the CAVE. In: Zaphiris, P., Ioannou, A. (eds) Learning and Collaboration Technologies. Technology-Rich Environments for Learning and Collaboration. LCT 2014. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol 8524. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-07485-6_10
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-07485-6_10
Publisher Name: Springer, Cham
Print ISBN: 978-3-319-07484-9
Online ISBN: 978-3-319-07485-6
eBook Packages: Computer ScienceComputer Science (R0)