| Literature DB >> 29909286 |
Sean Minns1, Andrew Levihn-Coon1, Emily Carl2, Jasper A J Smits1, Wayne Miller3, Don Howard4, Santiago Papini1, Simon Quiroz4, Eunjung Lee-Furman1, Michael Telch1, Per Carlbring5, Drew Xanthopoulos4, Mark B Powers6.
Abstract
Stereoscopic 3D gives the viewer the same shape, size, perspective and depth they would experience viewing the real world and could mimic the perceptual threat cues present in real life. This is the first study to investigate whether an immersive stereoscopic 3D video exposure-based treatment would be effective in reducing fear of spiders. Participants with a fear of spiders (N = 77) watched two psychoeducational videos with facts about spiders and phobias. They were then randomized to a treatment condition that watched a single session of a stereoscopic 3D immersive video exposure-based treatment (six 5-min exposures) delivered through a virtual reality headset or a psychoeducation only control condition that watched a 30-min neutral video (2D documentary) presented on a computer monitor. Assessments of spider fear (Fear of Spiders Questionnaire [FSQ], Behavioral Approach Task [BAT], & subjective ratings of fear) were completed pre- and post-treatment. Consistent with prediction, the stereoscopic 3D video condition outperformed the control condition in reducing fear of spiders showing a large between-group effect size on the FSQ (Cohen's d = 0.85) and a medium between-group effect size on the BAT (Cohen's d = 0.47). This provides initial support for stereoscopic 3D video in treating phobias.Entities:
Keywords: Exposure therapy; Specific phobia; Spider phobia; Virtual reality
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29909286 DOI: 10.1016/j.janxdis.2018.05.006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Anxiety Disord ISSN: 0887-6185