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Virtual Reality, Augmented Reality, and In Vivo Exposure Therapy: A Preliminary Comparison of Treatment Efficacy in Small Animal Phobia
Author(s) -
Carlos SusoRibera,
Javier FernándezÁlvarez,
Azucena GarcíaPalacios,
Hunter G. Hoffman,
Juana BretónLópez,
Rosa Baños,
Soledad Quero,
Cristina Botella
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
cyberpsychology behavior and social networking
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.199
H-Index - 143
eISSN - 2152-2723
pISSN - 2152-2715
DOI - 10.1089/cyber.2017.0672
Subject(s) - exposure therapy , virtual reality exposure therapy , specific phobia , moderation , anxiety , modalities , analysis of variance , psychology , clinical psychology , randomized controlled trial , medicine , anxiety disorder , psychiatry , social psychology , social science , sociology
This study aggregated data from three randomized control trials to explore the differential efficacy of three forms of exposure therapy, namely, in vivo (iVET), virtual reality (VRET), and augmented reality (ARET), in the treatment of small animal phobia. Additionally, baseline patient characteristics were used to detect subgroups of patients who showed a differential response to certain treatment modalities. Primary measures were distance covered, anxiety during the behavioral avoidance test (BAT), and overall fear of small animals. A repeated-measures analysis of variance was used to explore the overall treatment effect across the exposure modalities. A cluster analysis and an analysis of moderation were conducted to explore differential response to treatments. The main study finding was that the three treatment conditions were similarly efficacious in the treatment of small animal phobia for all study outcomes. Only for distance covered, our results revealed a tendency for iVET to be more effective than VRET and ARET in participants with worse performance on the BAT before treatment. The present study findings provide further evidence for the comparable efficacy of the three forms of exposure. Our results also suggest that, overall, treatments are likely to be similarly effective, regardless of the individual baseline characteristics (i.e., fear, anxiety, and age), whereas pretreatment scores on distance covered in the avoidance test might be used to personalize treatments (iVET may be preferable when participants perform worse at pretreatment).

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