
Slide

Centre Interdisciplinaire
de Recherche et d’Innovation
en Cybersécurité et Société
de Recherche et d’Innovation
en Cybersécurité et Société
1.
Bouchard, S.; Robillard, G.; St-Jacques, J.; Dumoulin, S.; Patry, M. -J.; Renaud, P.
Reliability and validity of a single-item measure of presence in VR Article d'actes
Dans: Proceedings - 3rd IEEE International Workshop on Haptic, Audio and Visual Environments and their Applications - HAVE 2004, p. 59–61, Ottawa, Ont., 2004, ISBN: 0-7803-8817-8 978-0-7803-8817-8.
Résumé | Liens | BibTeX | Étiquettes: Computer software, Education, Environmental distractions, Ergonomics, Human factors, Information technology, Item-response theory, Psychological Tests, reliability, Sensitivity analysis, Statistical methods, virtual reality
@inproceedings{bouchard_reliability_2004,
title = {Reliability and validity of a single-item measure of presence in VR},
author = {S. Bouchard and G. Robillard and J. St-Jacques and S. Dumoulin and M. -J. Patry and P. Renaud},
url = {https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-15944418961&partnerID=40&md5=7aff5eba0fac9d8ca8adeb0a40063473},
isbn = {0-7803-8817-8 978-0-7803-8817-8},
year = {2004},
date = {2004-01-01},
booktitle = {Proceedings - 3rd IEEE International Workshop on Haptic, Audio and Visual Environments and their Applications - HAVE 2004},
pages = {59–61},
address = {Ottawa, Ont.},
abstract = {Measuring presence reliably and with minimal intrusion manner is not easy. The present study reports on six studies that have validated a measure of presence consisting of only one item. The content, face validity, test-retest, convergent and divergent validity as well as sensitivity were all confirming reliability and validity of a single-item measure. ©2004 IEEE.},
keywords = {Computer software, Education, Environmental distractions, Ergonomics, Human factors, Information technology, Item-response theory, Psychological Tests, reliability, Sensitivity analysis, Statistical methods, virtual reality},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
Measuring presence reliably and with minimal intrusion manner is not easy. The present study reports on six studies that have validated a measure of presence consisting of only one item. The content, face validity, test-retest, convergent and divergent validity as well as sensitivity were all confirming reliability and validity of a single-item measure. ©2004 IEEE.