Abstract

Previous research suggests that the size of one’s body is used as a metric to scale the external world. On the other hand, the influence of information from the external world on the perception of body size is unclear. It has been suggested that increased inter-pupillary distance (IPD) leads people to perceive the external world as smaller than it actually is. The present study investigated the effect of the IPD on body size perception, and the relationship between the perceived scale of the body and the external world when the IPD is manipulated. To this end, in a virtual environment, we manipulated the IPD as well as the size and presence of participants’ hands, while participant’s eye height was increased vertically. Results showed that, when participants’ eye height was increased and their hands were enlarged, people with a fixed IPD perceived the size of their body to be large (like a giant) while the external world was perceived to be changed minimally. Alternatively, people with increased IPD perceived that the external world as having shrank, whereas their perception of their body size changed little. However, when a viewers’ virtual hands were not shown, the IPD did not affect the individual’s percept of body size, although the IPD did affect one’s perception of the external world. These results suggest that, when the ratio of the size between one’s body and the external world are explicit, the perceived size of one’s body is affected by the IPD or perceived scale of the external world that is affected by the IPD.

Highlights

  • IntroductionPeople can perceive a body that does not look like their real body as their own body

  • In virtual environments, people can perceive a body that does not look like their real body as their own body

  • In the rating of S2 (Floating) and S4 (Ownership), there were no significant differences between these two conditions (S2: V = 193, p < .41, S4: V = 58.5, p = .14). These results showed that participants perceived the external world to be smaller when their inter-pupillary distance (IPD) was increased, a finding consistent with results of the previous research [8,9,10,11,12]

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Summary

Introduction

People can perceive a body that does not look like their real body as their own body. This phenomenon is termed the body ownership illusion [1, 2]. People can be embodied in a virtual body that is larger (or smaller) than their real body. This feature of virtual environments raises questions concerning how people feel when they become ‘giants’. Do they really feel that they are getting larger?

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