2024
DOI: 10.1037/xge0001576
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The presence of fear: How subjective fear, not physiological changes, shapes the experience of presence.

Christopher N. Maymon,
Matthew T. Crawford,
Katie Blackburne
et al.

Abstract: When we become engrossed in novels, films, games, or even our own wandering thoughts, we can feel present in a reality distinct from the real world. Although this subjective sense of presence is, presumably, a ubiquitous aspect of conscious experience, the mechanisms that produce it are unknown. Correlational studies conducted in virtual reality have shown that we feel more present when we are afraid, motivating claims that physiological changes contribute to presence; however, such causal claims remain to be … Show more

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