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Albert Rizzo
Researcher at University of Southern California
Publications - 340
Citations - 18507
Albert Rizzo is an academic researcher from University of Southern California. The author has contributed to research in topics: Virtual reality & Exposure therapy. The author has an hindex of 67, co-authored 331 publications receiving 16040 citations. Previous affiliations of Albert Rizzo include Institute for Creative Technologies & Harvard University.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Affective outcomes of virtual reality exposure therapy for anxiety and specific phobias: a meta-analysis.
Thomas D. Parsons,Albert Rizzo +1 more
TL;DR: Although meta-analysis revealed large declines in anxiety symptoms following VRET, moderator analyses were limited due to inconsistent reporting in the VRET literature, highlighting the need for future research studies that report uniform and detailed information regarding presence, immersion, anxiety and/or phobia duration, and demographics.
Journal ArticleDOI
A SWOT analysis of the field of virtual reality rehabilitation and therapy
TL;DR: It is hoped that this structured examination of the factors relevant to the current and future status of VR rehabilitation will provide a good overview of the key issues and concerns that are relevant for understanding and advancing this vital application area.
Journal ArticleDOI
The application of virtual reality technology in rehabilitation.
Maria T. Schultheis,Albert Rizzo +1 more
Proceedings ArticleDOI
SimSensei kiosk: a virtual human interviewer for healthcare decision support
David DeVault,Ron Artstein,Grace Benn,Teresa Dey,Ed Fast,Alesia Gainer,Kallirroi Georgila,Jon Gratch,Arno Hartholt,Margaux Lhommet,Gale M. Lucas,Stacy Marsella,Fabrizio Morbini,Angela Nazarian,Stefan Scherer,Giota Stratou,Apar Suri,David Traum,Rachel Wood,Yuyu Xu,Albert Rizzo,Louis-Philippe Morency +21 more
TL;DR: SimSensei Kiosk is presented, an implemented virtual human interviewer designed to create an engaging face-to-face interaction where the user feels comfortable talking and sharing information and development of a fully automatic virtual interviewer able to engage users in 15-25 minute interactions.
Journal ArticleDOI
Virtual Reality in Brain Damage Rehabilitation: Review
TL;DR: The use of VR in brain damage rehabilitation is expanding dramatically and will become an integral part of cognitive assessment and rehabilitation in the future.