Davis, DonnaBennett, Spencer2018-09-062018-09-06https://hdl.handle.net/1794/23804This study sought to explore the effects of virtual reality (VR) as a technology that can potentially improve guided meditation practices; VR guided meditation sessions and audio guided meditation sessions were compared. Specifically, this study investigated VR’s impact on an individual’s self-perception of psychological factors that reflect mood or emotion; it also examined VR’s impact on an individual’s self-perception of presence and relaxation. After examination, VR guided meditation had no significant impact on an individual’s self-perception of mood and emotion or self-reported feelings of relaxation. However, guided VR meditation had a significant impact on an individual’s self-reported perception of presence; participants who meditated with VR felt “as if they were at the beach.” Although this study demonstrated that a fairly inexpensive VR system can enhance feelings of presence, that sense of presence did not enhance feelings of well-being and relaxation; this could be attributed to the novelty effect.en-USCreative Commons BY 4.0-USEffectsMediaMeditationRealityVirtualA Trip to the Beach: Experimental Investigation of Mood, the Body, and Presence in Virtual Reality MeditationElectronic Thesis or Dissertation