Friday, May 20, 2005

Psychiatric VRx (virtual reality therapy)

Filed under: Psychiatry

Page Anderson, an assistant professor of psychology, models the latest trick of her trade -- a virtual reality helmet.Georgia State University is beginning a clinical trial to determine the effectiveness of virtual reality therapy for the treatment of public speaking phobia:

For many people, the mere thought of public speaking makes their palms sweat, heart race and stomach reel. But help may be on the way in the form of virtual reality exposure therapy - computer-generated images and sound delivered through a helmet-like headset. Page Anderson, an assistant professor of psychology at Georgia State University, is beginning a clinical study later this month to determine how effective the technology is in allaying the fear and anxiety that often accompany public speaking.

Using a virtual audience, Anderson's study will compare the efficacy of VRE therapy versus another type of cognitive behavioral therapy to treat public-speaking anxiety. She says this study will mark one of the first attempts using VRE therapy to treat an interpersonal fear. Traditionally, those seeking help to overcome phobias undergo "exposure therapy" - the idea that patients face their fears to beat them. For such therapy to work, the degree of exposure needs to be controlled and prolonged to give anxiety time to subside, then be repeated, Anderson says.

"All of that's difficult to do," she says. "So I'm examining whether facing one's fears in the virtual world allows one to conquer them in the real world."

The press release...

Georgia State University article: Head Games: High-tech Gear Helps Conquer Fears...

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replies: 1 comments
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Hi,

There has been a lot written about using VR to help with Public Speaking fears. I certinally think that it can help to a point, but I dont believe that it will make people good communicators. Public speaking is about connecting with your audience so they will adopt your message. Unfortunately, VR does not have the ability to interact with a speaker to the level that an audience would. Also, there is the possibility that speakers may lose all fear and therefore all nervousness about making a presentation or when doing public speaking. Believe it or not, this is not good as a certian level of nervousness is needed to make sure you put on a good performance. Just ask any musician if they get nervous before a big gig. They will all say "Yes!!!"

After using VR, people will certinally feel less fear when speaking, but they will not know how to communicate. They will still need to learn the skills pf public speaking.

Anyway, thats my 2 cents worth.

Cheers

Darren Fleming
www.executivespeaking.com.au


Posted by: public Speaking courses
on January 6, 2007 09:41 PM GMT