Authors
Jean-Louis Van Gelder, Claire Nee, Marco Otte, Andrew Demetriou, Iris Van Sintemaartensdijk, Jan-Willem Van Prooijen
Publication date
2017/2
Journal
Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency
Volume
54
Issue
1
Pages
29-62
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Description
Objectives
This article explores the potential of virtual reality (VR) to study burglary by measuring user responses on the subjective, physiological, and behavioral levels. Furthermore, it examines the influence of individual dispositions, such as sensation seeking and self-control, on behavior during a virtual burglary event.
Methods
Participants, male university undergraduates (N = 77), could freely move around a virtual neighborhood wearing a VR headset and using a game controller and were instructed to burgle one of the houses in the neighborhood. Participant movement, items stolen from the house, and heart rate (HR) were recorded throughout the burglary event. Individual dispositions were measured before, and subjective user responses were measured after, the event. Additionally, we experimentally varied whether there was an alarm sounding and participants’ beliefs about the chance of getting caught …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
JL Van Gelder, C Nee, M Otte, A Demetriou… - Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency, 2017