VR in Risk Communication
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/34135Date
2024-06-03Type
Master thesisMastergradsoppgave
Author
Kuipers, WytskeAbstract
The use of VR in research is growing, but lacks study in diverse cases. Specifically,
investigations into VR as a tool to foster risk communication is scant, but increasingly relevant.
As the sea level is predicted to rise in Tromsø, it is an example of a temporally distant but
nonetheless impending risk with relatively little current attention. With focus on this risk as a
case study, this project explores if and how VR impacts risk communication differently between
stakeholders. The three stakeholder groups investigated are municipal planners, local business
owners and citizens. They are interviewed about their risk understanding and risk perception
after using a 2D map and a VR simulation of predicted sea level rise and storm surge risks in
Tromsø in 2090.
The findings show many differences between individual interviewees, with some
common factors emerging between the stakeholder groups. Citizens are most impacted in terms
of their perception and understanding, as they sense little control over the risk. The local
business owners have diverse responses, have the most vulnerable stakes, but show relative little
concern. Municipal planners are the least impacted, as they have a prior established and solid
understanding of the risk.
Publisher
UiT Norges arktiske universitetUiT The Arctic University of Norway
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