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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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A Virtual Adolescent Patient with PTSD for Training Psychiatrists

TL;DR: Pilot data is provided on the current performance of a virtual adolescent PTSD patient with respect to assessment of psychiatric trainees’ interview skills, diagnostic acumen and knowledge to guide potential refinements of the VP technology for future applications in psychiatric training.

NIDRR Perspectives on VR Applications for Addressing the Needs of those Aging with and into Disability

TL;DR: The creation of home-based access to low-cost, interactive virtual reality systems designed to engage and motivate individuals to participate with “game”-driven physical activities and rehabilitation programming could serve to enhance, maintain and rehabilitate the sensorimotor processes that are needed to maximize independence and quality of life.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Human Factors Effects of Interaction and Display Devices in Virtual Reality (VR) Medical Rehabilitation

TL;DR: Experimental effects of 3-D magnetic and optical interaction devices and displays and shutter glasses better for some tasks compared to autostereoscopic on visual-motor rehabilitation tasks for stroke and brain injury patients are described.
Journal Article

Human Computer Interaction in Virtual Standardized Patient Systems

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate if clinicians could elicit proper responses from questions relevant for an interview from a virtual patient, and evaluate psychological variables such as openness and immersion on the question/response composites and the believability of the character as a patient.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Speech Behavioral Markers Align on Symptom Factors in Psychological Distress

TL;DR: The authors investigated the link between speech signals and psychological distress symptoms in a corpus of 333 screening interviews from the Distress Analysis Interview Corpus (DAIC), given the semi-structured organization of interviews, they aggregated speech utterances from responses to shared questions across interviews.