Exploring the heart rate as a chronemic cue in virtual settings : how perceptions of consistent and varied heart rates of a storyteller influence self-reported other-arousal, empathy and social presence

While the heart rate has been used as a psychophysiological measure in media research, the perception of heart rates may have a considerable influence on individuals. Based on social information processing theory, this paper proposes the heart rate as a chronemic cue in virtual environments, with a...

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Main Authors: Li, Benjamin Junting, Bailenson, Jeremy N., Ogle, Elise, Zaki, Jamil
Other Authors: Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2022
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/155449
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1554492022-03-17T07:41:52Z Exploring the heart rate as a chronemic cue in virtual settings : how perceptions of consistent and varied heart rates of a storyteller influence self-reported other-arousal, empathy and social presence Li, Benjamin Junting Bailenson, Jeremy N. Ogle, Elise Zaki, Jamil Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information Social sciences::Communication Heart Rates Psychophysiological Measure While the heart rate has been used as a psychophysiological measure in media research, the perception of heart rates may have a considerable influence on individuals. Based on social information processing theory, this paper proposes the heart rate as a chronemic cue in virtual environments, with a varied heart rate accompanying a communicator’s emotional expressions leading to differing perceptions among observers as compared to a consistent one. In a pilot study, 44 participants watched a recording of a virtual human telling an emotional story and either saw it without any accompanying heart rate, a consistent heart rate or a varied one. Results showed that varied heart rate can lead to higher perceived other-arousal, empathy and social presence in observers as compared to a consistent heart rate. Study 2 tested the original hypotheses with a larger sample, and introduced two new conditions which explored the conformity and violations of observer’s expectations of heart rates; specifically if the varied heart rate needs to be in synch with the expressed emotions. Results from 173 participants showed that varied heart rate conditions which conformed to observers’ expectations of heart rate and emotional content lead to higher perceived other-arousal, empathy and social presence. Nanyang Technological University This work was supported by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation [72394] and a Start-Up Grant from Nanyang Technological University. 2022-03-17T07:41:52Z 2022-03-17T07:41:52Z 2021 Journal Article Li, B. J., Bailenson, J. N., Ogle, E. & Zaki, J. (2021). Exploring the heart rate as a chronemic cue in virtual settings : how perceptions of consistent and varied heart rates of a storyteller influence self-reported other-arousal, empathy and social presence. Media Psychology, 24(5), 688-712. https://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15213269.2020.1788394 1521-3269 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/155449 10.1080/15213269.2020.1788394 2-s2.0-85089033054 5 24 688 712 en Media Psychology © 2020 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC. All rights reserved.
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social sciences::Communication
Heart Rates
Psychophysiological Measure
spellingShingle Social sciences::Communication
Heart Rates
Psychophysiological Measure
Li, Benjamin Junting
Bailenson, Jeremy N.
Ogle, Elise
Zaki, Jamil
Exploring the heart rate as a chronemic cue in virtual settings : how perceptions of consistent and varied heart rates of a storyteller influence self-reported other-arousal, empathy and social presence
description While the heart rate has been used as a psychophysiological measure in media research, the perception of heart rates may have a considerable influence on individuals. Based on social information processing theory, this paper proposes the heart rate as a chronemic cue in virtual environments, with a varied heart rate accompanying a communicator’s emotional expressions leading to differing perceptions among observers as compared to a consistent one. In a pilot study, 44 participants watched a recording of a virtual human telling an emotional story and either saw it without any accompanying heart rate, a consistent heart rate or a varied one. Results showed that varied heart rate can lead to higher perceived other-arousal, empathy and social presence in observers as compared to a consistent heart rate. Study 2 tested the original hypotheses with a larger sample, and introduced two new conditions which explored the conformity and violations of observer’s expectations of heart rates; specifically if the varied heart rate needs to be in synch with the expressed emotions. Results from 173 participants showed that varied heart rate conditions which conformed to observers’ expectations of heart rate and emotional content lead to higher perceived other-arousal, empathy and social presence.
author2 Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information
author_facet Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information
Li, Benjamin Junting
Bailenson, Jeremy N.
Ogle, Elise
Zaki, Jamil
format Article
author Li, Benjamin Junting
Bailenson, Jeremy N.
Ogle, Elise
Zaki, Jamil
author_sort Li, Benjamin Junting
title Exploring the heart rate as a chronemic cue in virtual settings : how perceptions of consistent and varied heart rates of a storyteller influence self-reported other-arousal, empathy and social presence
title_short Exploring the heart rate as a chronemic cue in virtual settings : how perceptions of consistent and varied heart rates of a storyteller influence self-reported other-arousal, empathy and social presence
title_full Exploring the heart rate as a chronemic cue in virtual settings : how perceptions of consistent and varied heart rates of a storyteller influence self-reported other-arousal, empathy and social presence
title_fullStr Exploring the heart rate as a chronemic cue in virtual settings : how perceptions of consistent and varied heart rates of a storyteller influence self-reported other-arousal, empathy and social presence
title_full_unstemmed Exploring the heart rate as a chronemic cue in virtual settings : how perceptions of consistent and varied heart rates of a storyteller influence self-reported other-arousal, empathy and social presence
title_sort exploring the heart rate as a chronemic cue in virtual settings : how perceptions of consistent and varied heart rates of a storyteller influence self-reported other-arousal, empathy and social presence
publishDate 2022
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/155449
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