10th International Congress on Information and Communication Technology in concurrent with ICT Excellence Awards (ICICT 2025) will be held at London, United Kingdom | February 18 - 21 2025.
Authors - Arjun Mehra, Arti Devi, Ananya Sharma, Sahil Rana, Shivam Kumar, K V Uday, Varun Dutt Abstract - Virtual reality holds enormous potential for disaster preparedness; yet, little is known about how varying landslide risk levels and environmental elements (day vs night) impact people's physiological and psychological responses to these simulated catastrophes. By utilizing behavioral measures (Euclidean distance around collision, number of collisions, and velocity around collision), this study closes this gap by investigating stress and cognitive responses. Eighty volunteers were divided into four groups at random, and each group was exposed to a distinct set of landslide probabilities under various conditions: low likelihood during the day, high probability during the day, and high probability at night. The findings indicate that perceived risk significantly increased behavioral measurements, independent of time of day. These results demonstrate VR's capacity to improve cognitive engagement and equip participants to handle the psychological difficulties that arise in actual crisis scenarios.