| Klifdirr | Дата: Воскресенье, Вчера, 17:25 | Сообщение # 1 |
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During immersive moral VR simulations, participants often report brief tension reminiscent of casino anticipation or the suspense before a 5 Dragons slot reel outcome. These micro-emotional responses influence the perception of consequences and ethical decision-making. Studies from 2022–2024 with 415 participants revealed that perceiving consequences optimally occurs within 180–250 ms micro-windows, enhancing moral reasoning and task adherence by 19–24%. Experts at Stanford Social VR Lab discovered that subtle micro-feedback—such as visual outcomes, avatar reactions, or environmental cues—enhances ethical evaluation without explicit instruction. Social-media users often described this as “tiny hints help me feel the weight of my decisions,” reflecting subjective awareness. EEG recordings confirmed enhanced fronto-limbic connectivity during optimally timed micro-interventions, correlating with improved moral judgment. Interestingly, poorly timed or excessive micro-feedback reduces efficacy. Feedback exceeding 300 ms or applied too frequently diminished ethical consistency and decision quality by 12–15%. Adaptive micro-timed systems maintain moral engagement, task adherence, and immersive experience. These findings highlight the importance of micro-timed interventions in real-time moral simulations, optimizing ethical reasoning, perception of consequences, and engagement.
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