Design and Evaluation of Virtual Human Mediated Tasks for Assessment of Depression and Anxiety

Joy O. Egede, Dominic Price, D. Krishnan, S. Jaiswal, Natasha Elliot, R. Morriss, Maria Jose Galvez Trigo, N. Nixon, P. Liddle, C. Greenhalgh, M. Valstar
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Virtual human technologies are now being widely explored as therapy tools for mental health disorders including depression and anxiety. These technologies leverage the ability of the virtual agents to engage in naturalistic social interactions with a user to elicit behavioural expressions which are indicative of depression and anxiety. Research efforts have focused on optimising the human-like expressive capabilities of the virtual human, but less attention has been given to investigating the effect of virtual human mediation on the expressivity of the user. In addition, it is still not clear what an optimal task is or what task characteristics are likely to sustain long term user engagement. To this end, this paper describes the design and evaluation of virtual human-mediated tasks in a user study of 56 participants. Half the participants complete tasks guided by a virtual human, while the other half are guided by text on screen. Self-reported PHQ9 scores, biosignals and participants' ratings of tasks are collected. Findings show that virtual-human mediation influences behavioural expressiveness and this observation differs for different depression severity levels. It further shows that virtual human mediation improves users' disposition towards tasks.
虚拟人介导任务对抑郁和焦虑评估的设计与评价
虚拟人技术现在正被广泛探索作为心理健康障碍的治疗工具,包括抑郁症和焦虑症。这些技术利用虚拟代理的能力,与用户进行自然的社交互动,从而引发表明抑郁和焦虑的行为表达。研究工作主要集中在优化虚拟人的类人表达能力,但很少关注调查虚拟人中介对用户表达能力的影响。此外,我们仍然不清楚什么是最佳任务,或者什么任务特征可能维持长期用户粘性。为此,本文描述了在56名参与者的用户研究中虚拟人介导任务的设计和评估。一半的参与者在虚拟人的指导下完成任务,而另一半则在屏幕上的文字指导下完成任务。收集自我报告的PHQ9分数、生物信号和参与者对任务的评价。研究结果表明,虚拟人的中介影响行为表达,这种观察结果因不同的抑郁严重程度而有所不同。进一步表明,虚拟人中介改善了用户对任务的倾向。
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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