| Literature DB >> 36224289 |
Aileen C Naef1, Marie-Madlen Jeitziner2,3, Samuel E J Knobel1, Matthias Thomas Exl2, René M Müri4, Stephan M Jakob2, Tobias Nef5,6, Stephan M Gerber1.
Abstract
Stress is a part of everyday life which can be counteracted by evoking the relaxation response via nature scenes presented using immersive virtual reality (VR). The aim of this study was to determine which sensory aspect of immersive VR intervention is responsible for the greatest relaxation response. We compared four conditions: auditory and visual combined (audiovisual), auditory only, visual only, and no artificial sensory input. Physiological changes in heart rate, respiration rate, and blood pressure were recorded, while participants reported their preferred condition and awareness of people, noise, and light in the real-world. Over the duration of the stimulation, participants had the lowest heart rate during the audiovisual and visual only conditions. They had the steadiest decrease in respiration rate and the lowest blood pressure during the audiovisual condition, compared to the other conditions, indicating the greatest relaxation. Moreover, ratings of awareness indicated that participants reported being less aware of their surroundings (i.e., people, noise, light, real environment) during the audiovisual condition versus the other conditions (p < 0.001), with a preference for audiovisual inputs. Overall, the use of audiovisual VR stimulation is more effective at inducing a relaxation response compared to no artificial sensory inputs, or the independent inputs.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36224289 PMCID: PMC9560033 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-21575-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.996
Descriptions of the four different test conditions.
| Sensory inputs ( | Devices used | Condition description |
|---|---|---|
| Audiovisual | Head-Mounted Display & Noise-Cancelling Headphones | Participants received both the 360° video and corresponding sound through the head-mounted display and noise-cancelling headphones |
| Auditory only | Noise-Cancelling Headphones Only | Participants received only the audio through the noise-cancelling headphones without wearing the head-mounted display |
| Visual only | Head-Mounted Display Only | Participants received only the 360° video visually through the head-mounted display without wearing the noise-cancelling headphones |
| Control | No Head-Mounted Display & No Noise-Cancelling Headphones | Participants did not receive any video or sound and did not wear the head-mounted display nor the noise-cancelling headphones. Participants were not blindfolded and did not wear earplugs. |
Description of Subjective Participant Awareness and Intervention Preference Questions (translated from German). Q1 was asked after each condition except when no artificial sensory inputs were provided. Q2-5 were asked after each of the interventions, and Q6 was asked only after the final intervention was completed.
| Not at all | Slightly | Somewhat | Moderately | Extremely | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Q1 | During my experience I felt unwell (e.g., nausea, dizziness, …) | |||||
| Q2 | I was aware of my real surroundings | |||||
| I was aware of the following things: | ||||||
| Q3 | Light | |||||
| Q4 | Noise | |||||
| Q5 | Staff | |||||
Figure 1Still photo from three of the videos provided to the participants via the head-mounted display.
Generalized additive mixed model (GAMM) for the heart rate, respiration rate, and blood pressure. For each model, the coefficient representing the intercept of the data and its significance is shown. The sampling frequency is 12 samples/min for heart rate (t(59,951)) and respiration rate (t(59,951)), and 0.5 samples/min for blood pressure (t(2502)). Intercept data has no practical meaning as the model could not be set to zero[48,49]. Abbreviations: standard error (SE), confidence interval (CI), test statistic with sample size used for the predictions in the model (t( )), proportion of the t distribution at that df which is greater than the absolute value of your t statistic (PR( >|t|)). Significant p-values are in bold.
| Coefficient | SE | 95% CI | t | Pr( >|t|) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Audiovisual (intercept) | − 6.142 | 2.115 | [− 10.29, − 2.00] | − 2.904 | |
| Auditory only | 0.210 | 0.052 | [0.11, 0.31] | 4.051 | |
| Visual only | − 0.034 | 0.052 | [− 0.14, 0.07] | − 0.648 | 0.517 |
| Control | 0.780 | 0.052 | [0.68, 0.88] | 14.960 | |
| Age | 0.013 | 0.026 | [− 0.04, 0.06] | 0.509 | 0.610 |
| Sex | 0.392 | 0.805 | [− 1.18, 1.97] | 0.487 | 0.626 |
| Audiovisual (intercept) | − 5.391 | 4.661 | [− 14.53, 3.74] | − 1.157 | 0.247 |
| Auditory only | − 0.717 | 0.111 | [− 0.93, − 0.05] | − 6.488 | |
| Visual only | − 1.184 | 0.111 | [− 1.40, − 0.97] | − 10.707 | |
| Control | 1.191 | 0.111 | [0.97, 1.41] | 0.700 | |
| Age | − 0.020 | 0.057 | [− 0.13, 0.09] | − 0.345 | 0.730 |
| Sex | 0.734 | 1.773 | [− 2.74, 4.21] | 0.414 | 0.679 |
| Audiovisual (intercept) | − 0.634 | 3.076 | [− 6.67, 5.40] | − 0.206 | 0.837 |
| Auditory only | 1.770 | 0.257 | [1.27, 2.27] | 6.883 | |
| Visual only | 0.703 | 0.257 | [0.20, 1.21] | 2.734 | |
| Control | 1.272 | 0.257 | [0.77, 1.78] | 4.953 | |
| Age | − 0.030 | 0.038 | [− 0.10, 0.04] | − 0.786 | 0.432 |
| Sex | − 1.589 | 1.169 | [− 3.88, 0.70] | − 1.360 | 0.174 |
Figure 2Physiological changes in heart rate (top), respiration rate (middle), and mean arterial pressure (bottom) over the 30-min intervention period. (Left) Raw data (n = 42) which has been centered to zero. 95% confidence intervals (CI) are shown at the bottom of each plot. (Right) Modelled data generated using the Generalized Additive Mixed Model and the raw data. 95% confidence intervals (CI) are shown at the bottom of each plot.
Figure 3Participant (n = 42) responses to subjective questionnaires. (a) Shows the percent of participants who preferred the different conditions. (b) Subjective rating of how aware the participants were of people in the room during the different conditions. (c) Subjective rating of how aware the participants were of the noises in the room during the different conditions. (d) Subjective rating of how aware the participants were of the light in the room during the different conditions. Vertical bars represent the standard error and horizontal bars represent significant differences between the conditions, the alpha level was set to 0.05.
The difference in subjective awareness between the different intervention conditions. Due to non-normality and use of an ordinal scale for the dependent variable, a non-parametric Friedman test was used. It was followed up by a pairwise Wilcoxon signed rank test, with a Bonferroni correction, to identify which conditions are different. Questions asked are presented on the left (Table 2) and were rated using a Likert scale from 1 (“Not at all”) to 5 (“Completely”). Abbreviations: Friedman test statistic (Statistic), p-value (p), Bonferroni adjusted p-value (p-adjusted). Significant p-values are in bold.
| Question | Group 1 ( | Group 2 ( | Test statistic | p | p adjusted |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Friedman test | 40.1 | < 0.001 | – | ||
| Auditory only | Audiovisual | 245 | 0.006 | ||
| Auditory only | Control | 69 | 0.002 | ||
| Auditory only | Visual | 187 | 0.719 | 1 | |
| Audiovisual | Control | 5 | < 0.001 | ||
| Audiovisual | Visual only | 40.5 | < 0.001 | ||
| Control | Visual only | 285 | < 0.001 | ||
| Friedman test | 37.3 | < 0.001 | – | ||
| Auditory only | Audiovisual | 198 | 0.063 | 0.376 | |
| Auditory only | Control | 28 | < 0.001 | ||
| Auditory only | Visual | 40 | 0.004 | ||
| Audiovisual | Control | 0 | < 0.001 | ||
| Audiovisual | Visual only | 31.5 | < 0.001 | ||
| Control | Visual only | 73.5 | 0.188 | 1 | |
| Friedman test | 60.6 | < 0.001 | – | ||
| Auditory only | Audiovisual | 549 | < 0.001 | ||
| Auditory only | Control | 25 | 0.025 | 0.149 | |
| Auditory only | Visual | 562 | < 0.001 | ||
| Audiovisual | Control | 0 | < 0.001 | ||
| Audiovisual | Visual only | 78.5 | 0.775 | 1 | |
| Control | Visual only | 484 | < 0.001 | ||
| Friedman test | 22.1 | < 0.001 | – | ||
| Auditory only | Audiovisual | 88.5 | 0.208 | 1 | |
| Auditory only | Control | 8 | < 0.001 | ||
| Auditory only | Visual | 61 | 0.032 | 0.193 | |
| Audiovisual | Control | 28 | < 0.001 | ||
| Audiovisual | Visual only | 57 | 0.119 | 0.714 | |
| Control | Visual only | 202 | 0.011 | 0.067 | |