Katharina Margareta Theresa Pöhlmann

About Katharina Margareta Theresa Pöhlmann

Katharina Margareta Theresa Pöhlmann, With an exceptional h-index of 5 and a recent h-index of 5 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at University of Lincoln, specializes in the field of XR, Virtual Reality, Vection, Cybersickness, Motion Sickness.

His recent articles reflect a diverse array of research interests and contributions to the field:

From Slow-Mo to Ludicrous Speed: Comfortably Manipulating the Perception of Linear In-Car VR Motion Through Vehicular Translational Gain and Attenuation

Can Brain Stimulation Reduce VR motion sickness in Healthy Young Adults During an Immersive Relaxation Application? A Study of tACS

Resting-state EEG in the Vestibular Region Can Predict Motion Sickness Induced by a Motion-Simulated in-car VR Platform

Surveying the Social Comfort of Body, Device, and Environment-Based Augmented Reality Interactions in Confined Passenger Spaces Using Mixed Reality Composite Videos

2nd Workshop on Multimodal Motion Sickness Detection and Mitigation Methods for Car Journeys-Finding Consensus in the Field

Manipulating the Orientation of Planar 2D Content in VR as an Implicit Visual Cue for Mitigating Passenger Motion Sickness

Using VR While Travelling: Manipulating the Orientation of Planar 2D Content in VR as an Implicit Visual Cue for Mitigating Passenger Motion Sickness

I think I don’t feel sick: Exploring the Relationship Between Cognitive Demand and Cybersickness in Virtual Reality using fNIRS

Katharina Margareta Theresa Pöhlmann Information

University

Position

___

Citations(all)

72

Citations(since 2020)

72

Cited By

0

hIndex(all)

5

hIndex(since 2020)

5

i10Index(all)

2

i10Index(since 2020)

2

Email

University Profile Page

Google Scholar

Katharina Margareta Theresa Pöhlmann Skills & Research Interests

XR

Virtual Reality

Vection

Cybersickness

Motion Sickness

Top articles of Katharina Margareta Theresa Pöhlmann

From Slow-Mo to Ludicrous Speed: Comfortably Manipulating the Perception of Linear In-Car VR Motion Through Vehicular Translational Gain and Attenuation

2024/3/12

Can Brain Stimulation Reduce VR motion sickness in Healthy Young Adults During an Immersive Relaxation Application? A Study of tACS

2024/1/24

Resting-state EEG in the Vestibular Region Can Predict Motion Sickness Induced by a Motion-Simulated in-car VR Platform

2023/12/5

Surveying the Social Comfort of Body, Device, and Environment-Based Augmented Reality Interactions in Confined Passenger Spaces Using Mixed Reality Composite Videos

Proceedings of the ACM on Interactive, Mobile, Wearable and Ubiquitous Technologies

2023/9/27

2nd Workshop on Multimodal Motion Sickness Detection and Mitigation Methods for Car Journeys-Finding Consensus in the Field

2023/9/18

Manipulating the Orientation of Planar 2D Content in VR as an Implicit Visual Cue for Mitigating Passenger Motion Sickness

2023/9/18

Using VR While Travelling: Manipulating the Orientation of Planar 2D Content in VR as an Implicit Visual Cue for Mitigating Passenger Motion Sickness

2023/6/7

I think I don’t feel sick: Exploring the Relationship Between Cognitive Demand and Cybersickness in Virtual Reality using fNIRS

2023/4/19

You spin me right round, baby, right round: examining the impact of multi-sensory self-motion cues on motion sickness during a VR reading task

2023/4/19

Can gender and motion sickness susceptibility predict cybersickness in VR?

2023/3/25

Exploring Neural Biomarkers in Young Adults Resistant to VR Motion Sickness: A Pilot Study of EEG

2023/3/25

Cyborgs on the Road: Workshop on Augmenting Road Users to Quantify their Behaviour

2023/3/12

Display Rotation for Reducing Motion Sickness Caused by Using VR in Vehicles

2022/9/17

Can Visual Motion Presented in a VR Headset Reduce Motion Sickness for Vehicle Passengers?

2022/9/17

Workshop on Multimodal Motion Sickness Detection and Mitigation Methods for Car Journeys

2022/9/17

Action video game players do not differ in the perception of contrast-based motion illusions but experience more vection and less discomfort in a virtual environment compared …

Journal of Cognitive Enhancement

2022/3/31

Towards Cross-Platform and Multi-Transport Real Time XR-Experiences

2022

The relationship between vection, cybersickness and head movements elicited by illusory motion in virtual reality

Displays

2022/1/1

The effect of motion direction and eccentricity on vection, VR sickness and head movements in virtual reality

Multisensory research

2021/4/20

See List of Professors in Katharina Margareta Theresa Pöhlmann University(University of Lincoln)

Co-Authors

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