Using VR Headsets for Helicopter Simulations

Analysing How Field-of-View In VR Headsets Affects Helicopter Pilot Performance

Master Thesis (2024)
Author(s)

M.S.B. Ali (TU Delft - Aerospace Engineering)

Contributor(s)

Olaf Stroosma – Mentor (TU Delft - Control & Simulation)

M Mulder – Mentor (TU Delft - Control & Simulation)

MM van Paassen – Mentor (TU Delft - Control & Simulation)

Faculty
Aerospace Engineering
More Info
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Publication Year
2024
Language
English
Graduation Date
30-10-2024
Awarding Institution
Delft University of Technology
Programme
Aerospace Engineering
Faculty
Aerospace Engineering
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Abstract

Research into analysing the feasibility of using VR headsets to train helicopter pilots is in its infancy. While enough is known about what effects VR headsets have on pilots, a research gap exists in the field of explaining what exactly causes these effects to occur. This thesis aims to develop a visual model that can be used to analytically predict how pilot behaviour will be affected by a changing Field-of-View and explain why these changes occur. The scope of this model is analysing where in the pilot’s vision, the point of most feedback lies, and what happens when this point gets clipped out of view while the pilot controls a two degree-of-freedom helicopter model. Subsequently, human-in-the-loop experiments were carried out where the participants had to do velocity disturbance rejection tasks and pitch disturbance rejection tasks for various fields-of-view, to try and validate the model. It was predicted that the performance for the pitch disturbance rejection task would not be affected by the field-of-view but the performance for the velocity disturbance rejection task would degrade as field-of-view was lowered. Overall, there was no significant trend that emerged from the experiments for either task, but significant insights were gained into the scope of the visual model. Based on these, and other findings, the model did a good job in identifying why performance changes and in setting up future researchers for success in this field.

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File under embargo until 31-12-2025