AIJun 6, 2023

VR.net: A Real-world Dataset for Virtual Reality Motion Sickness Research

arXiv:2306.03381v130 citationsh-index: 88
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This provides a foundational resource for researchers studying VR motion sickness, enabling applications like risk factor detection and sickness level prediction.

The paper introduces VR.net, a dataset of approximately 12-hour gameplay videos from ten real-world VR games with motion sickness-related labels, to address the need for accurately-labeled, diverse data for machine learning research in VR motion sickness.

Researchers have used machine learning approaches to identify motion sickness in VR experience. These approaches demand an accurately-labeled, real-world, and diverse dataset for high accuracy and generalizability. As a starting point to address this need, we introduce `VR.net', a dataset offering approximately 12-hour gameplay videos from ten real-world games in 10 diverse genres. For each video frame, a rich set of motion sickness-related labels, such as camera/object movement, depth field, and motion flow, are accurately assigned. Building such a dataset is challenging since manual labeling would require an infeasible amount of time. Instead, we utilize a tool to automatically and precisely extract ground truth data from 3D engines' rendering pipelines without accessing VR games' source code. We illustrate the utility of VR.net through several applications, such as risk factor detection and sickness level prediction. We continuously expand VR.net and envision its next version offering 10X more data than the current form. We believe that the scale, accuracy, and diversity of VR.net can offer unparalleled opportunities for VR motion sickness research and beyond.

Foundations

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