What is it about?
What causes us to feel that we are 'present' in reality? By exposing people to extreme heights in virtual reality, we demonstrated that people feel more present when they become afraid. More surprising, though, is that physiological changes associated with fear (e.g., heart rate speeding up and increased sweating) were unrelated to presence, despite these physiological measures also increasing considerably during height exposure. In our study, we showed that changes in subjective measures of fear (not physiological changes) are shaping presence.
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Why is it important?
Our findings challenge current explanations about the mechanisms underpinning the feeling that we are present within reality. Prominent theories posit that presence is informed by signals from the body through a process known as 'interoception'. We found no evidence of a connection between presence and changes in signals from the body. Instead, our results are in line with a mechanism in which subjective feelings about the intensity of our emotional state give rise to presence.
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This page is a summary of: The presence of fear: How subjective fear, not physiological changes, shapes the experience of presence., Journal of Experimental Psychology General, April 2024, American Psychological Association (APA),
DOI: 10.1037/xge0001576.
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