The impact of natural and urban environmental settings on exercise and perceptual responses during virtual reality-based exercise
Emanuel Festino, Olga Papale, Cristina Cortis, Andrea Fusco, Angela Hibbs, Mohammed Khudair, Kandianos E. Sakalidis, Gill Barry, Florentina J. Hettinga, Gavin D. Tempest

TL;DR
This study found that cycling in a virtual natural environment can enhance the exercise experience and engagement compared to cycling without virtual reality.
Contribution
The study reveals that non-immersive natural virtual environments can improve specific flow dimensions during exercise.
Findings
Nature VR increased Action-Awareness Merging, Loss of Self-Consciousness, and Unambiguous Feedback compared to no VR.
Both Nature and Urban VR conditions showed higher Autotelic Experience and enjoyment than no VR.
Exercise performance metrics did not differ significantly between conditions.
Abstract
Exercise in virtual reality (VR) is engaging and provides a positive experience, contributing to long-term adherence. Psychological responses such as flow, a state of optimal engagement, and enjoyment, may contribute to these benefits. However, it is unclear whether cycling exercise in different virtual environments influence exercise and perceptual responses. Therefore, this study aimed to evaluate the effects of a natural and urban non-immersive VR environment versus no VR on exercise and perceptual responses during cycling activity. Twenty-three physically active young adults completed 10 min of self-paced indoor cycling in three randomized conditions: No VR, and VR with Nature (Nature VR) and Urban (Urban VR) scenes. Power output, speed, heart rate, and Rating of Perceived Exertion were recorded. After each condition, participants completed the Flow State Scale (FSS) and Physical…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVirtual Reality Applications and Impacts · Flow Experience in Various Fields · Adventure Sports and Sensation Seeking
