Imagine what it would be like to step into someone else's shoes-not as a metaphor, but for real. To see the world through their eyes, feel their emotions, and navigate their challenges. Virtual reality (VR) is making this possible, offering a new way to bridge divides, foster empathy, and challenge biases.
By addressing such a diverse range of groups, VR is showing us something profound: the universality of bias and the pressing need for creative ways to tackle it.
In the last decade, VR's role in prejudice research has exploded. Half of the studies covered in the systematic review were published after 2020.
This kind of intersectionality highlights that prejudice isn't one-size-fits-all, and neither are the solutions.
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