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Using Virtual Reality to Compare Design Alternatives Using Subjective and Objective Evaluation Methods.

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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Virtual reality (VR) offers a viable platform for evidence-based design. Combining subjective and objective VR data effectively identifies optimal design options, enhancing healthcare environment evaluations.

Keywords:
ambulatory surgical environmentshealthcare designprototypingsimulation-based evaluationvirtual reality

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Area of Science:

  • Healthcare design research
  • Human-computer interaction
  • Virtual reality applications

Background:

  • Virtual reality (VR) is a promising research platform for evidence-based design.
  • Traditional user feedback methods offer subjective insights but lack objective comparative capabilities for design alternatives.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To develop a method for evidence-based evaluation of multiple design options in virtual reality (VR).
  • To integrate subjective insights with objective data from VR platforms for design evaluation.
  • To explore how objective VR data can complement traditional evaluation strategies.

Main Methods:

  • A repeated measures study involving nursing faculty.
  • User feedback collected via surveys, interviews, and the VR platform.
  • Scenario-based simulations in VR to compare three preoperative room designs.

Main Results:

  • Convergent findings from surveys, interviews, and VR data identified the highest-performing design.
  • Room 2 was perceived to have better access to supplies, movement, and space.
  • Objective VR data indicated significantly higher visibility of patients and care partners in Room 2.

Conclusions:

  • Simulation-based evaluations in VR, combining subjective and objective data, are effective for design option assessment.
  • Scenario-based VR simulations provide a structured, clinically relevant method for evaluating user responses to simulated healthcare environments.