so this is muntaner station, that i saw in the vr model? yes.ng that you get from the virtual reality, from the fact that it is so immersive, that you are thrown into a virtual world? when i get to a real situation, i am used to it, i am trained for it. so it doesn't surprise me so much as it could. it is quite unusual being in the real station, having spent a little bit of time in the virtual version. what has been interesting walking around here is noticing i now know the layout, the geography of the station. i know where all of the exits are, i know where the escalators are, and which direction of travel they go in. so even i was able to learn something very, very quickly in that virtual reality version of this subway station. but vr has its limitations. robert guest is from birmingham university and is part of the auggmed development team. you can't really get a physical hands on an object in virtual reality, but what we can trade is things like decision—based training. we can look at emotional management and general communication skills bet