Publication statistics

Pub. period:1992-2007
Pub. count:8
Number of co-authors:9



Co-authors

Number of publications with 3 favourite co-authors:

Thomas A. Furness:6
Henry Been-Lirn Duh:5
James Jeng-Weei Lin:4

 

 

Productive colleagues

Donald E. Parker's 3 most productive colleagues in number of publications:

Henry Been-Lirn Du..:21
Thomas A. Furness:18
Maxwell J. Wells:8
 
 
 
May 19

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-- Paul Rand, 1997

 
 

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Donald E. Parker

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Publications by Donald E. Parker (bibliography)

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2007
 
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Lin, James Jeng-Weei and Parker, Donald E. (2007): User Experience Modeling and Enhancement for Virtual Environments That Employ Wide-Field Displays. In: Duffy, Vincent G. (ed.) ICDHM 2007 - First International Conference on Digital Human Modeling July 22-27, 2007, Beijing, China. pp. 423-433.

2004
 
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Duh, Henry Been-Lirn, Parker, Donald E. and Furness, Thomas A. (2004): An Independent Visual Background Reduced Simulator Sickness in a Driving Simulator. In Presence: Teleoperators and Virtual Environments, 13 (5) pp. 578-588.

2002
 
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Duh, Henry Been-Lirn, Lin, James Jeng-Weei, Kenyon, Robert V., Parker, Donald E. and Furness, Thomas A. (2002): Effects of Characteristics of Image Quality in an Immersive Environment. In Presence: Teleoperators and Virtual Environments, 11 (3) pp. 324-332.

 
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Lin, James Jeng-Weei, Duh, Henry Been-Lirn, Abi-Rached, Habib, Parker, Donald E. and Furness, Thomas A. (2002): Effects of Field of View on Presence, Enjoyment, Memory, and Simulator Sickness in a Virtual Environment. In: VR 2002 2002. pp. 164-171.

2001
 
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Duh, Henry Been-Lirn, Parker, Donald E. and Furness, Thomas A. (2001): An "Independent Visual Background" Reduced Balance Disturbance Envoked by Visual Scene Motion: Implication for Alleviating Simulator Sickness. In: Beaudouin-Lafon, Michel and Jacob, Robert J. K. (eds.) Proceedings of the ACM CHI 2001 Human Factors in Computing Systems Conference March 31 - April 5, 2001, Seattle, Washington, USA. pp. 85-89.

Simulator sickness (SS) / virtual environment (VE) sickness is expected to become increasingly troublesome as VE technology evolves [20]. Procedures to alleviate SS / VE sickness have been of limited value [12]. This paper investigated a possible procedure to reduce SS and VE sickness. Postural disturbance was evoked by visual scene motion at different frequencies. Differences in disturbance were examined as a function of simultaneous exposure to an "independent visual background" (IVB). Eight subjects were tested at two scene motion frequencies and three different IVB conditions using a within-subjects design. An expected statistically significant interaction between IVB condition and frequency was observed. For low frequency scene movements, subjects exhibited less balance disturbance when the IVB was presented. We suggest that an IVB may alleviate disturbance when conflicting visual and inertial cues are likely to result in simulator or VE sickness.

© All rights reserved Duh et al. and/or ACM Press

 
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Duh, Henry Been-Lirn, Lin, James Jeng-Weei, Kenyon, Robert V., Parker, Donald E. and Furness, Thomas A. (2001): Effects of Field of View on Balance in an Immersive Environment. In: VR 2001 2001. pp. 235-240.

1995
 
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Prothero, Jerrold D., Hoffman, Hunter G., Parker, Donald E., Furness, Thomas A. and Wells, Maxwell J. (1995): Foreground/Background Manipulations Affect Presence. In: Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society 39th Annual Meeting 1995. pp. 1410-1414.

A possible relation between vection and presence is discussed. Two experiments examined the hypothesis that "presence" is enhanced by manipulations which facilitate interpreting visual scenes as "background." A total of 39 participants in two experiments engaged in a pursuit game while in a virtual visual environment generated by an HMD and rated their experience of "presence" on 5 questions. Experiment 1 compared two viewing conditions: visual scene masking -- at the eye and a paper mask mounted on the screen with the same 60{deg} FOV, and showed that presence was enhanced by eye masking relative to screen masking. Experiment 2 replicated these findings with a double-blind experimental design.

© All rights reserved Prothero et al. and/or Human Factors Society

1992
 
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Parker, Donald E. and Harm, Deborah L. (1992): Mental Rotation: A Key to Mitigation of Motion Sickness in the Virtual Environment?. In Presence: Teleoperators and Virtual Environments, 1 (3) pp. 329-333.

 
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Page maintainer: The Editorial Team
URL: http://www.interaction-design.org/references/authors/donald_e__parker.html

Publication statistics

Pub. period:1992-2007
Pub. count:8
Number of co-authors:9



Co-authors

Number of publications with 3 favourite co-authors:

Thomas A. Furness:6
Henry Been-Lirn Duh:5
James Jeng-Weei Lin:4

 

 

Productive colleagues

Donald E. Parker's 3 most productive colleagues in number of publications:

Henry Been-Lirn Du..:21
Thomas A. Furness:18
Maxwell J. Wells:8
 
 
 
May 19

Design can be art. Design can be aesthetics. Design is so simple, that's why it is so complicated.

-- Paul Rand, 1997

 
 

Featured chapter

Read the fascinating history of Wearable Computing, told by its father, Steve Mann

Read Steve's chapter !

 
 

Help us help you!