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Bringing Exposure Therapy to Real-Life Context With Augmented Reality-Dogs (ARET)-Dogs
Sponsor: Wayne State University
Summary
In this patented project, U.S. Patent No. 10,839,707, the investigators will develop an augmented reality exposure therapy method for cynophobia, also known as dog phobia, to test in the clinic. The platform will include a software that allows the clinician (psychiatrist/therapist) to position virtual objects in the real environment of the patient with the above mentioned phobia while the patient is wearing the augmented reality (AR) device. Then the clinician will lead the patient through steps of exposure therapy to the feared object. The investigators will then measure the impact of treatment and compare to before treatment measures of fear of the phobic object. Exposure therapy is the most evidence-based treatment for specific phobias, social phobia, obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The core principle is patient's exposure to the feared objects/situations guided by a clinician. For example, in cynophobia, patient is exposed to pictures of dogs printed or on a computer screen - or if available, view of a real dog in the office. Gradually, patient tolerates viewing/approaching the dog from a closer distance, and fear response extinguishes. The clinician has a crucial role in signaling safety to the patient, as well as providing support and coaching. This treatment is limited by multiple factors: 1) limited access to feared objects/situations in the clinic, 2) even when feared objects are available, they are not diverse (e.g. different types, sizes, and colors of dogs), which limits generalization of safety learning, 3) when available, clinician has very limited control over behaviors of the feared object, 4) safety learning is limited to the clinic office context, and contextualization of safety learning to real life experiences is left to the patient to do alone, which often does not happen. This is specifically important in conditions such as PTSD, where there is cumulative evidence for impaired contextualization as a key neurobiological underpinning. 5) Lack of geographical access to experts in exposure therapy, especially for PTSD, in rural areas.
Official title: Bringing Exposure Therapy for Animal Phobias to Real-Life Context With Augmented Reality-Dogs
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - 45 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
25
Start Date
2022-09-15
Completion Date
2025-08-31
Last Updated
2025-08-15
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Augmented reality exposure therapy
Virtual objects will be placed in the patient's visual field, superimposed on their real environment for exposure therapy.
Locations (1)
Wayne State University Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neurosciences
Detroit, Michigan, United States