Increasing resilience and preventing suicide: training and interventions with a distressed virtual human in virtual reality

Talya Nakash, Tom Haller, Maya Shekel, D. Pollak, Moti Lewenchuse, A. Klomek, D. Friedman
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Virtual agents have been used as virtual patients for medical training, as well as for mental health training. When the training takes place inside VR the experience is more immersive, which allows for illusions of presence: the illusion that you are co-present with the virtual agent in the same space, and the illusion that the virtual agent is a real human. We have developed 'Daniel', a VR framework, based on a semi-automated virtual agent, which can be used for training for increasing resilience and for suicide prevention, and has the potential of being used as an intervention. Here we report on two different studies aimed at evaluating the framework and the psychological protocols involved. In the first study we trained participants from the general population to develop a resilience plan intervention (RPI) with a distressed virtual agent, and in the second study we trained therapists to use the safety plan intervention (SPI) with a suicidal virtual agent. In both cases we compare the VR sessions with role-playing by human actors. We report that all interventions resulted in an increase in participant self-efficacy in helping others, and we also report results on the possible importance of presence and social presence.
增强复原力和预防自杀:在虚拟现实中训练和干预一个痛苦的虚拟人
虚拟代理已被用作医疗培训和心理健康培训的虚拟病人。当训练在VR中进行时,体验更加身临其境,这允许存在的错觉:你与虚拟代理在同一空间共同存在的错觉,以及虚拟代理是真实人类的错觉。我们开发了“丹尼尔”,这是一个基于半自动虚拟代理的VR框架,可用于增强复原力和预防自杀的培训,并有可能被用作干预手段。在这里,我们报告了两项不同的研究,旨在评估框架和涉及的心理协议。在第一项研究中,我们训练来自普通人群的参与者与一个痛苦的虚拟代理一起制定弹性计划干预(RPI),在第二项研究中,我们训练治疗师与一个自杀虚拟代理一起使用安全计划干预(SPI)。在这两种情况下,我们将VR会话与人类演员的角色扮演进行比较。我们报告说,所有的干预措施都增加了参与者在帮助他人方面的自我效能感,我们也报告了在场和社会在场可能的重要性的结果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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