The Scotsman

Virtual reality ‘therapy’ can help cure fear of heights by facing down phobia

- By JOHN VON RADOWITZ newsdeskts@scotsman.com

Fear of heights can be overcome using virtual reality to simulate dizzying experience­s such as being perched on the edge of a tenth-floor balcony, a study has shown.

Psychiatri­sts in Oxford tested the therapy on 100 volunteers with a serious height phobia who responded to adverts on local radio.

They were split into two groups, one of which underwent six 30- minute virtual reality( V R) sessions over a period of two weeks.

Patients wore VR headsets that immersed them in a virtual world where, guided by an avatar “coach”, they were encouraged to face their fears.

Within the simulation, each participan­t was taken to a 10 -storey office block with a yawning atrium.

There, they engaged in activities designed to be both entertaini­ng and increasing­ly ter- ror-defying. Examples included crossing a rickety walkway, stepping out on a platform with no safety barriers, rescuing a cat from a tree, and playing a xylophone on the edge of a balcony.

Finally, they were given the opportunit­y tor idea virtual whale around the atrium space.

Professor Daniel Freeman, from Oxford University’ s Department of Psychiatry, said: “The results are extraordin­arily good. We were confident the treatment would prove effective, but the outcomes exceeded our expectatio­ns.

“Over three-quarters of the participan­ts receiving the VR treatments showed at least a halving of their fear of heights. Our study demonstrat­es that virtual reality can be an extremely powerful means to deliver psychologi­cal therapy.

“We know that the most effective treatments are active: patients go into the sit- uations they find difficult and practise more helpful ways of thinking and behaving. This is often impractica­l in face-toface therapy, but easily done in VR.”

The results are reported in the latest edition of the Lancet Psychiatry journal.

On average, the participan­ts had lived with a fear of heights for 30 years. Before the treatment they were tested to see if they met the criteria for a genuine fear of heights, or acro - phobia.

Height experience­s began with easier challenges, such as a safety barrier slowly lowering no more than five floors up.

Prof Freeman said: “When VRisd one properly, the experience triggers the same psychologi­cal and physiologi­cal reactions as real-life situations. And that means that what people learn from the VR therapy can help them in the real world.”

 ??  ?? 0 Simulated experience­s are being used by psychiatri­sts in Oxford to help people with fear of heights tackle their phobia
0 Simulated experience­s are being used by psychiatri­sts in Oxford to help people with fear of heights tackle their phobia

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