Litcius/Paper detail

Breathing based immersive interactions for enhanced agency and body awareness: a claustrophobia motivated study

Iddo Yehoshua Wald, Amber Maimon, Lucas Keniger De Andrade Gensas, Noemi Guiot, Meshi Ben Oz, Benjamin W. Corn, Amir Amedi

202315 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This work explores utilizing representations of one’s physiological breath (embreathment) in immersive experiences, for enhancing presence and body awareness. Particularly, embreathment is proposed for reducing claustrophobia and associated negative cognitions such as feelings of restriction, loss of agency, and sense of suffocation, by enhancing agency and interoception in circumstances where one’s ability to act is restricted. The informed design process of an experience designed for this purpose is presented, alongside an experiment employing the experience, evaluating embodiment, presence, and interoception. The results indicate that embreathment leads to significantly greater levels of embodiment and presence than either an entrainment or control condition. In addition, a modest trend was observed in a heartbeat detection task implying better interoception in the intervention conditions than the control. These findings support the initial assumptions regarding presence and body awareness, paving the way for further evaluation with individuals and situations related to the claustrophobia use case.

Topics & Concepts

InteroceptionFeelingSense of agencyPsychologyCognitive psychologyBreathingTask (project management)Agency (philosophy)CognitionApplied psychologyComputer scienceSocial psychologyPerceptionEngineeringEpistemologyNeuroscienceSystems engineeringPsychiatryPhilosophyVirtual Reality Applications and ImpactsPsychosomatic Disorders and Their TreatmentsAction Observation and Synchronization