Author:
Valmaggia Lucia R.,Freeman Daniel,Green Catherine,Garety Philippa,Swapp David,Antley Angus,Prescott Corinne,Fowler David,Kuipers Elizabeth,Bebbington Paul,Slater Mel,Broome Matthew,McGuire Philip K.
Abstract
BackgroundVirtual reality provides a means of studying paranoid thinking in controlled laboratory conditions. However, this method has not been used with a clinical groupAimsTo establish the feasibility and safety of using virtual reality methodology in people with an at-risk mental state and to investigate the applicability of a cognitive model of paranoia to this groupMethodTwenty-one participants with an at-risk mental state were assessed before and after entering a virtual reality environment depicting the inside of an underground trainResultsVirtual reality did not raise levels of distress at the time of testing or cause adverse experiences over the subsequent week. Individuals attributed mental states to virtual reality characters including hostile intent. Persecutory ideation in virtual reality was predicted by higher levels of trait paranoia, anxiety, stress, immersion in virtual reality, perseveration and interpersonal sensitivityConclusionsVirtual reality is an acceptable experimental technique for use with individuals with at-risk mental states. Paranoia in virtual reality was understandable in terms of the cognitive model of persecutory delusions
Publisher
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
85 articles.
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