| Literature DB >> 26339283 |
Irene Alice Chicchi Giglioli1, Federica Pallavicini1, Elisa Pedroli1, Silvia Serino1, Giuseppe Riva2.
Abstract
Augmented Reality is a new technological system that allows introducing virtual contents in the real world in order to run in the same representation and, in real time, enhancing the user's sensory perception of reality. From another point of view, Augmented Reality can be defined as a set of techniques and tools that add information to the physical reality. To date, Augmented Reality has been used in many fields, such as medicine, entertainment, maintenance, architecture, education, and cognitive and motor rehabilitation but very few studies and applications of AR exist in clinical psychology. In the treatment of psychological disorders, Augmented Reality has given preliminary evidence to be a useful tool due to its adaptability to the patient needs and therapeutic purposes and interactivity. Another relevant factor is the quality of the user's experience in the Augmented Reality system determined from emotional engagement and sense of presence. This experience could increase the AR ecological validity in the treatment of psychological disorders. This paper reviews the recent studies on the use of Augmented Reality in the evaluation and treatment of psychological disorders, focusing on current uses of this technology and on the specific features that delineate Augmented Reality a new technique useful for psychology.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26339283 PMCID: PMC4538767 DOI: 10.1155/2015/862942
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Comput Math Methods Med ISSN: 1748-670X Impact factor: 2.238
Figure 1It shows a continuum between reality and virtual reality. Mixed reality is located between them and includes Augmented Reality (AR) and augmented virtuality (AV). AR is placed closer to real enviroment than virtual environment.
Figure 2Flow diagram of study selection.
Detailed search strategy.
| “Augmented Reality” and psycholog* | Assessment | Treatment | Other sources | Total | |
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| Medline | 23 | 56 | 267 | 346 | |
| PsycINFO | 133 | 21 | 28 | 182 | |
| Web of Science (Web of Knowledge) | 69 | 145 | 164 | 378 | |
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| 225 | 222 | 459 | 12 |
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| 191 | 203 | 378 | 12 |
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*is a Jolly characters that means that the search strategy included terms as psychology and/or psychological.
Information about the selected studies on the assessment and treatment of specific phobia for small animals using an AR system.
| Authors | Year | Sample | Conditions | Dependent variables | AR device | Results |
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| Juan et al. [ | 2004 | 1 patient with cockroach phobia | Case study with AR | Anxiety | HMD with AR-tags | Decrease of anxiety level after treatment |
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| Botella et al. [ | 2005 | 1 patient with cockroach phobia | Case study with AR | Avoidance | HMD with AR-tags | Decrease of anxiety, fear, and avoidance after treatment |
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| Juan et al. [ | 2005 | 9 patients with cockroach and spider phobia | AR | Anxiety | HMD with AR-tags | Decrease of anxiety, fear, and avoidance after treatment |
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| Botella et al. [ | 2010 | 6 patients with cockroach phobia | AR | Anxiety | HMD with AR-tags | Decrease of anxiety, fear, and avoidance after treatment and maintained at follow-up periods (three, six, and twelve months follow-up) |
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Bretón-López et al. [ | 2010 | 6 patients with cockroach phobia | AR | Anxiety | HMD with AR-tags | Decrease of anxiety. High levels of presence and reality judgment |
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| Botella et al. [ | 2011 | 1 patient with cockroach phobia | Case Study with AR | Anxiety | Mobile phone marker less versus HMD AR-tags | Decrease of anxiety, fear, and avoidance behaviours in both conditions. |
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| Juan and Calatrava [ | 2011 | 24 healthy volunteers | AR-OST HMD | Anxiety | AR-OST HMD versus | The AR-VST induced grater sense of presence than AR-OST. |
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| Juand and Joele [ | 2011 | 24 healthy volunteers | AR marker-based versus | Anxiety | HMD with visible AR-tags versus invisible AR-tags | The invisible AR-tags induced a higher sense of presence and anxiety than the visible AR-tags |
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| Wrzesien et al. [ | 2011a | 22 patients with cockroach and spider phobia | In vivo versus AR | Anxiety, behavioural avoidance Belief in negative thoughts | HMD with AR-tags | Decrease of anxiety, fear, avoidance behaviours, and belief in negative thoughts |
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| Wrzesien et al. [ | 2011b | 22 patients with cockroach and spider phobia | AR | Anxiety, behavioural avoidance Belief in negative thoughts | HMD with AR-tags | Decrease of anxiety, fear, avoidance behaviours, and belief in negative thoughts |
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| Wrzesien et al. [ | 2013 | 26 healthy volunteers | AR | Anxiety | Therapeutic lamp (TL) | Decrease of anxiety |
Information about the selected studies on the assessment of acrophobia using an AR system.
| Authors | Year | Sample | Conditions | Dependent variables | AR device | Results |
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| Juan et al. [ | 2006 | 41 healthy volunteers | Real environment versus AR environment | Sense of presence | AR-HMD | High sense of presence in the AR environment |
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| Juan and Prez [ | 2010 | 20 healthy volunteers | AR system versus VR system | Sense of presence | HMD-AR with tags | In regard to sense of presence and anxiety levels, AR is effective as VR |