Fromm, Jennifer:
Effective Use of Virtual and Augmented Reality : A Technical and Socio-Behavioral Affordance Perspective
Duisburg, Essen, 2023
2023dissertationOA Platinum
PsychologyFaculty of Engineering » Computer Science and Applied Cognitive Science
Title in English:
Effective Use of Virtual and Augmented Reality : A Technical and Socio-Behavioral Affordance Perspective
Author:
Fromm, Jennifer
GND
1299381081
Thesis advisor:
Stieglitz, StefanUDE
GND
1020953853
LSF ID
56892
ORCID
0000-0002-4366-1840ORCID iD
Other
connected with university
Place of publication:
Duisburg, Essen
Year of publication:
2023
Open Access?:
OA Platinum
Extent:
1 Band (verschiedene Seitenzählungen)
DuEPublico 2 ID
Library shelfmark:
Note:
Dissertation, Universität Duisburg-Essen, 2023, kumulative Dissertation
Language of text:
English
Type of resource:
Text

Abstract in English:

The relevance of virtual and augmented reality as enabling technologies of the metaverse is increasing. Despite their importance for the metaverse, both virtual and augmented reality are not yet widely used. Besides technical limitations, a lack of effective use could be a reason for this. In the field of Information Systems, effective use is understood as the successful realization of a technology's potentials for action, or so-called affordances. This cumulative dissertation examined how the effective use of virtual and augmented reality can be promoted from a technical and socio-behavioral affordance perspective. From a technical affordance perspective, it was investigated how virtual and augmented reality systems should be designed to enable their effective use in the contexts of higher education and emergency management. The results show that effective use can be fostered by implementing design elements that promote the perception of the unique affordances of virtual and augmented reality compared with existing systems. From a socio-behavioral perspective, it was examined what user behavior constitutes the effective use of social (virtual reality) applications in which users pursue shared versus different goals on the same platform. The findings reveal that effective use behavior involves not only the successful realization of affordances, but also dealing with constraints emerging from technical limitations and interactions with other users pursuing different goals. The dissertation contributes prescriptive knowledge in the form of design principles and a better understanding of the user behavior that constitutes the effective use of virtual and augmented reality to Information Systems research.