Developing and evaluating the fidelity of virtual reality-artificial intelligence (VR-AI) environment for situated learning

IntroductionSocialization is crucial for facilitating disciplinary enculturation, yet traditional classroom instruction often lacks authentic socialization opportunities, limiting students’ exposure to their disciplinary communities. To address this gap, this study develops an immersive Virtual Real...

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Main Authors: April Tan, Michael C. Dorneich, Elena Cotos
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2025-07-01
Series:Frontiers in Virtual Reality
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Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/frvir.2025.1587768/full
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author April Tan
April Tan
Michael C. Dorneich
Elena Cotos
author_facet April Tan
April Tan
Michael C. Dorneich
Elena Cotos
author_sort April Tan
collection DOAJ
description IntroductionSocialization is crucial for facilitating disciplinary enculturation, yet traditional classroom instruction often lacks authentic socialization opportunities, limiting students’ exposure to their disciplinary communities. To address this gap, this study develops an immersive Virtual Reality-Artificial Intelligence (VR-AI) environment that simulates academic conference poster sessions. Learners interact with AI-driven agents, engaging in discussions and receiving real-time feedback on research communication. This study focuses on developing, operationalizing, and evaluating the fidelity of the VR-AI environment across four key dimensions: physical, functional, psychological, and social fidelity.MethodsTwenty participants tested the environment, completing two learning tasks: engaging with poster presenters and reflecting with a major professor. Fidelity was assessed using mixed methods, including presence questionnaires, workload assessments, behavioral observations, and semi-structured interviews. ResultsFindings indicate high physical and functional fidelity, with participants describing the environment as immersive and reflective of real-world academic settings. Psychological fidelity was also well represented, as learners engaged in cognitively demanding research discussions and rhetorical reflection. However, social fidelity remained a challenge, as AI agents struggled with conversational turn-taking and response length, reducing the authenticity of academic exchanges.DiscussionThese findings highlight the potential of VR-AI environments for disciplinary socialization while underscoring the need for refined AI-driven interaction designs to support more fluid, reciprocal dialogue.
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spelling doaj-art-eb6e988f4e8a46a9bb1c8589d07a40f72025-08-20T03:29:17ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Virtual Reality2673-41922025-07-01610.3389/frvir.2025.15877681587768Developing and evaluating the fidelity of virtual reality-artificial intelligence (VR-AI) environment for situated learningApril Tan0April Tan1Michael C. Dorneich2Elena Cotos3Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Systems Engineering, Iowa State University, Ames, IA, United StatesDepartment of English, Iowa State University, Ames, IA, United StatesDepartment of Industrial and Manufacturing Systems Engineering, Iowa State University, Ames, IA, United StatesDepartment of English, Iowa State University, Ames, IA, United StatesIntroductionSocialization is crucial for facilitating disciplinary enculturation, yet traditional classroom instruction often lacks authentic socialization opportunities, limiting students’ exposure to their disciplinary communities. To address this gap, this study develops an immersive Virtual Reality-Artificial Intelligence (VR-AI) environment that simulates academic conference poster sessions. Learners interact with AI-driven agents, engaging in discussions and receiving real-time feedback on research communication. This study focuses on developing, operationalizing, and evaluating the fidelity of the VR-AI environment across four key dimensions: physical, functional, psychological, and social fidelity.MethodsTwenty participants tested the environment, completing two learning tasks: engaging with poster presenters and reflecting with a major professor. Fidelity was assessed using mixed methods, including presence questionnaires, workload assessments, behavioral observations, and semi-structured interviews. ResultsFindings indicate high physical and functional fidelity, with participants describing the environment as immersive and reflective of real-world academic settings. Psychological fidelity was also well represented, as learners engaged in cognitively demanding research discussions and rhetorical reflection. However, social fidelity remained a challenge, as AI agents struggled with conversational turn-taking and response length, reducing the authenticity of academic exchanges.DiscussionThese findings highlight the potential of VR-AI environments for disciplinary socialization while underscoring the need for refined AI-driven interaction designs to support more fluid, reciprocal dialogue.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/frvir.2025.1587768/fullVR educationAI learningsituated learningfidelitypedagogical GPT agentsgenre theory
spellingShingle April Tan
April Tan
Michael C. Dorneich
Elena Cotos
Developing and evaluating the fidelity of virtual reality-artificial intelligence (VR-AI) environment for situated learning
Frontiers in Virtual Reality
VR education
AI learning
situated learning
fidelity
pedagogical GPT agents
genre theory
title Developing and evaluating the fidelity of virtual reality-artificial intelligence (VR-AI) environment for situated learning
title_full Developing and evaluating the fidelity of virtual reality-artificial intelligence (VR-AI) environment for situated learning
title_fullStr Developing and evaluating the fidelity of virtual reality-artificial intelligence (VR-AI) environment for situated learning
title_full_unstemmed Developing and evaluating the fidelity of virtual reality-artificial intelligence (VR-AI) environment for situated learning
title_short Developing and evaluating the fidelity of virtual reality-artificial intelligence (VR-AI) environment for situated learning
title_sort developing and evaluating the fidelity of virtual reality artificial intelligence vr ai environment for situated learning
topic VR education
AI learning
situated learning
fidelity
pedagogical GPT agents
genre theory
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/frvir.2025.1587768/full
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