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A high-fidelity virtual environment for the study of paranoia.

TLDR
It is demonstrated that the virtual reality scenario was able to elicit paranoia in a nonclinical, healthy group and that an urban scene was more likely to lead to higher levels of paranoia than a virtual indoor environment.
Abstract
Psychotic disorders carry social and economic costs for sufferers and society. Recent evidence highlights the risk posed by urban upbringing and social deprivation in the genesis of paranoia and psychosis. Evidence based psychological interventions are often not offered because of a lack of therapists. Virtual reality (VR) environments have been used to treat mental health problems. VR may be a way of understanding the aetiological processes in psychosis and increasing psychotherapeutic resources for its treatment. We developed a high-fidelity virtual reality scenario of an urban street scene to test the hypothesis that virtual urban exposure is able to generate paranoia to a comparable or greater extent than scenarios using indoor scenes. Participants (n = 32) entered the VR scenario for four minutes, after which time their degree of paranoid ideation was assessed. We demonstrated that the virtual reality scenario was able to elicit paranoia in a nonclinical, healthy group and that an urban scene was more likely to lead to higher levels of paranoia than a virtual indoor environment. We suggest that this study offers evidence to support the role of exposure to factors in the urban environment in the genesis and maintenance of psychotic experiences and symptoms. The realistic high-fidelity street scene scenario may offer a useful tool for therapists.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Virtual reality in the assessment and treatment of psychosis: a systematic review of its utility, acceptability and effectiveness

TL;DR: Preliminary findings suggest that virtual reality is a promising method to be used in the assessment of neurocognitive deficits and the study of relevant clinical symptoms and can be applied to the delivery of cognitive rehabilitation, social skills training interventions and virtual reality-assisted therapies for psychosis.
Journal ArticleDOI

The relationship between neurocognition and symptomatology in people with schizophrenia: social cognition as the mediator.

TL;DR: It is suggested that neurocognitive deficits predispose people with schizophrenia to worse psychiatric symptoms through the impairment of social cognition.
Journal ArticleDOI

Brave New Worlds—Review and Update on Virtual Reality Assessment and Treatment in Psychosis

TL;DR: Virtual reality applications for assessment and treatment of psychotic disorders are in their infancy, but appear to have a great potential for increasing the understanding of psychosis and expanding the therapeutic toolbox.
Journal ArticleDOI

Subjective emotional over-arousal to neutral social scenes in paranoid schizophrenia.

TL;DR: The present study is the first designed to directly demonstrate subjective emotional over-arousal to neutral social scenes in paranoid schizophrenia, and could be viewed as the missing link between the primary neurobiological and secondary psychological mechanisms of paranoid psychotic-symptom formation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Investigation of the effect of self-efficacy levels of caregiver family members of the individuals with schizophrenia on burden of care.

TL;DR: The results indicate that the burden of care decreases with the increasing level of self-efficacy in caregiver family members.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The continuity of psychotic experiences in the general population

TL;DR: Evidence for the continuity of psychotic symptoms with normal experiences is reviewed, focusing on the symptoms of hallucinations and delusions, and the theoretical and treatment implications of such a continuum are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Emotional reactivity to daily life stress in psychosis.

TL;DR: Higher levels of familial risk for psychosis were associated with higher levels of emotional reactivity to daily life stress in a dose-response fashion and this interaction was investigated as a vulnerability marker for psychotic illness.
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