Litcius/Paper detail

Virtual reality-based assessment and treatment of social functioning impairments in psychosis: a systematic review

Simon Riches, Sara Pisani, L. Bird, Mar Rus‐Calafell, Philippa Garety, Lucia Valmaggia

2021International Review of Psychiatry35 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

= 2,853), comprising twenty-six head-mounted display studies (20 assessment, 6 treatment) and thirty-two immersive 2D screen studies (23 assessment, 9 treatment), were included. There were forty-eight observational studies and ten randomised controlled trials, with 1570 participants (of which, 185 were at ultra-high risk of psychosis) in VR test groups. Nearly half the studies were published since 2016. Assessments targeted cognitive and behavioural indicators of social functioning, e.g. paranoia, eye gaze, or interpersonal distance. Treatments promoted cognitive-behavioural social skills or job interview training. Studies indicate feasibility, acceptability, and effectiveness of VR for social functioning impairments in psychosis. Limitations of studies include the narrow scope of social functioning, small sample sizes, and limited randomised controlled trials and standardised interventions. Findings suggest VR has potential to be integrated with existing psychological approaches.

Topics & Concepts

PsycINFOPsychologyCochrane LibrarySocial skillsMEDLINEClinical psychologyPsychological interventionObservational studyParanoiaPsychosisVirtual realitySystematic reviewRandomized controlled trialPsychiatryMedicineLawArtificial intelligenceComputer sciencePathologySurgeryPolitical sciencePsychosomatic Disorders and Their TreatmentsSchizophrenia research and treatmentMental Health and Psychiatry