Investigating the Effects of Appearance and Animation Realism on the Perception of Expressive Photorealistic Virtual Humans
Summary
Currently, digital assistants are predominantly limited to the modality of audio or text.
As technology is moving at a rapid pace however, we can soon expect them to adopt full
artificial human appearances. Investigating the perception of these virtual humans can
help guide designers to better engineer these artificial digital humans that are to take on
the roles of digital companions.
In the past, numerous research studies have investigated the perception of virtual humans under the lens of appearance realism and animation realism among other characteristics. However, virtual humans formerly termed photorealistic, cannot be called as
such under today’s standards anymore. While previously, it was a well-established fact
that photorealistic characters elicit the uncanny valley phenomenon - recent research
investigations have challenged this by re-opening research questions and making use of
new state-of-the-art photorealistic digital human models. This paper aims to contribute
towards this research effort by investigating main and interaction effects of appearance
realism and animation realism for expressive virtual humans.
In a study with 62 participants, there were statistically significant effects of appearance
realism for social presence. Additionally, animation realism as well as appearance realism played a significant effect on perceived discomfort towards the virtual human.
Finally, evidence hints at higher animation realism being received significantly better
when paired with photorealistic characters.