@hci-uwb

Am I Still Me? Visual Congruence Across Reality–Virtuality and Avatar Appearance in Shaping Self-Perception and Behavior

, , , , , , and . IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics, (2026)To be published..

Abstract

This paper presents the first systematic investigation of how congruence in visual self-representation influences self-perception and behavior. We span a continuum from the physical self through avatars with graded self-similarity to clearly dissimilar avatars in virtual reality (VR). In a 1x4 within-user study, participants completed movement and quiz tasks in either physical reality or a digital twin environment in VR, where they embodied one of three avatars: a photorealistic self-similar avatar, a dissimilar same-gender avatar, or a dissimilar opposite-gender avatar. Subjective measures included presence, sense of embodiment, self-identification, and perceived change, and were complemented by an objective movement metric of behavioral change. Compared to physical reality, VR, even with a self-similar avatar, produced lower presence, a weaker sense of embodiment, and reduced self-identification, revealing a persistent gap in visual congruence. Within VR, self-similar avatars enhanced body ownership, self-location, and self-identification relative to dissimilar avatars. Conversely, dissimilar avatars produced measurable behavioral changes compared with self-similar ones. Gender cues, however, had little impact in gender-neutral tasks. Overall, the findings show that photorealistic self-similar avatars reinforce embodiment and self-identification. However, VR still falls short of achieving congruence with physical reality, underscoring key challenges for avatar realism and ecological validity.

Links and resources

Tags