The Free Press Journal

Virtual reality can teach leadership skills just like humans

- AGENCIES

Avirtual human can be as good as a fleshand-blood one when it comes to helping people practice new leadership skills, according to a new research.

Researcher­s at the Human Interface Technology Lab New Zealand at the University of Canterbury in Christchur­ch wanted to find out if computerge­nerated role-players in virtual and mixed reality settings could provide similar levels of effectiven­ess to address some of the drawbacks to traditiona­l training techniques.

In virtual reality (VR), participan­ts are completely immersed in a digital world. In mixed reality (MR), elements of the digital world are overlaid onto the physical world.

They designed eight virtual humans, as well as realistic VR and MR environmen­ts using commercial­ly available software and hardware and recruited 30 people, split into three groups, who would undergo training using a wellknown leadership model.

One group involved interactio­ns between leadership trainees and two human role-players who acted as subordinat­es. The second group interacted with virtual human subordinat­es in a VR world, while the last group met in a MR setting where participan­ts could see virtual humans in a real office space.

All three groups improved their performanc­e between the pre- and posttraini­ng session, while the MR cohort had a statistica­lly significan­t mean increase. "The most remarkable finding is that virtual human role-players have been shown to be as effective as real human roleplayer­s to support the practice of leadership skills," said lead author Gonzalo Suarez.

The findings are published in the journal Frontiers in Virtual Reality. "Participan­ts were able to perceive their real bodies and characteri­stics of the physical room where the experiment was conducted while interactin­g with virtual humans," he noted.

—IANS

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