denise-quesnelOne of the unique affordances of virtual reality is its power to convey the vastness of scale, which can invoke feelings of awe. Denise Quesnel is a graduate student at Simon Frasier University’s iSpace Lab, and she has been studying the process of invoking awe using Google Earth VR. She was inspired by Frank White’s work on The Overview Effect, which documented the worldview transformations of many astronauts after they observed the vastness of the Earth from the perspective of space.

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Quesnel wants to better understand the Overview Effect phenomenon, and whether or not it’s possible to use immersive VR to induce it. Anecdotally, I think that it’s certainly possible as I reported my own experience of having a virtual overview effect in my interview with Google Earth VR engineers. Quesnel won the best 3DUI poster award at the IEEE VR conference for her study Awestruck: Natural Interaction with Virtual Reality on Eliciting Awe.

I had a chance to catch up with Quesnel at the IEEE VR conference in March where she shared her research into awe, how it can be quantified by verbal expressions, chills, or goosebumps, and how she sees awe as a catalyst for the transformative potential of virtual reality.

Here’s a short video summarizing Quesnel’s research into using Google Earth VR to study the induction of awe:

Here’s Quesnel’s poster on Awe summarizing results:
Quesnel-Awe


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  • Wednaud Ronelus

    Hello Kent,

    Once again, this is seminal work on the serious side of VR research. This is a great stepping stone.

    Wednaud

  • Foreign Devil

    All this data concludes: VR is awesome.

  • Kris Bunch

    I downloaded Google Earth VR. Gonna have to fire it up today and check this out.

    • J.C.

      It’s neat. Last time I used it was on my 970. Now that I have a 1080, I’m curious if some of the structures will be higher detail. I’m assuming the program is scaling model detail to keep the framerate up. Screenshots I saw of certain structures looked so much better than what my 970 showed me. The Golden Gate Bridge, specifically, looked like a ps1 model, while the promo screenshot looks fantastic.

  • YmpulsiV

    I stepped into Google Earth VR and was amazed by the experience. I looked specifically for my address on the Globe (mind u its just a speck in the grand scheme of things on a global scale) …and I found it. Pretty impressive. The deails were missing, but the fact that “my address/my house” could be found on Google Earth VR had a cool factor for me. Pretty neat.