TY - JOUR
T1 - The Use of Virtual Reality in the Assessment of Paranoid Thoughts
T2 - A Comparison with Desktop-Based Tools
AU - Soflau, Radu
AU - David, Daniel
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 The Author(s) 2019. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The British Computer Society. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: [email protected].
PY - 2019/6/1
Y1 - 2019/6/1
N2 - Although virtual reality systems (VR) are being increasingly used to assess paranoid thoughts, there is a scarcity of data concerning the relative usefulness of VR for investigating these symptoms. The current study aimed to compare the usefulness of VR with that of a less expensive desktop-based tool for assessing paranoia. One hundred and twenty-six participants (mean age = 21.42 years, SD = 4.38, range = 18, 47; 81.8% female) were recruited for this study. After completing measures of trait paranoia and of a number of theoretical predictors of paranoia, participants were randomly assigned to a VR or a desktop-based assessment of paranoid thoughts. An identical neutral social scenario was implemented in both conditions. Results showed that unlike desktop-based assessments (F(1, 64) = 2.01, p =. 161, partial Latin small letter Eng2 =. 03), VR assessments indicated higher levels of paranoid thoughts among individuals with high levels of trait paranoia than among those with low levels of trait paranoia (F(1, 64) = 5.49, p =. 022, partial Latin small letter Eng2 =. 08), but only for one measure of paranoid thoughts. For the other measure, results followed a similar pattern, but the interaction between trait paranoia and the type of environment was not significant (F »(1, 65) = 3.57, p =. 052). Moreover, both measures of paranoid thoughts used in VR were significantly related to trait paranoia and a large number of predictors (p <. 05), while just one measure of paranoid thoughts used in the desktop environment was significantly associated with trait paranoia and solely one of the tested predictors (p <. 05). In addition, individuals assessed in VR reported higher levels of cognitive absorption than those assigned to a desktop-based assessment. Overall, findings of the present study suggest that VR may be better suited for the investigation of paranoid thoughts than desktop-based tools.
AB - Although virtual reality systems (VR) are being increasingly used to assess paranoid thoughts, there is a scarcity of data concerning the relative usefulness of VR for investigating these symptoms. The current study aimed to compare the usefulness of VR with that of a less expensive desktop-based tool for assessing paranoia. One hundred and twenty-six participants (mean age = 21.42 years, SD = 4.38, range = 18, 47; 81.8% female) were recruited for this study. After completing measures of trait paranoia and of a number of theoretical predictors of paranoia, participants were randomly assigned to a VR or a desktop-based assessment of paranoid thoughts. An identical neutral social scenario was implemented in both conditions. Results showed that unlike desktop-based assessments (F(1, 64) = 2.01, p =. 161, partial Latin small letter Eng2 =. 03), VR assessments indicated higher levels of paranoid thoughts among individuals with high levels of trait paranoia than among those with low levels of trait paranoia (F(1, 64) = 5.49, p =. 022, partial Latin small letter Eng2 =. 08), but only for one measure of paranoid thoughts. For the other measure, results followed a similar pattern, but the interaction between trait paranoia and the type of environment was not significant (F »(1, 65) = 3.57, p =. 052). Moreover, both measures of paranoid thoughts used in VR were significantly related to trait paranoia and a large number of predictors (p <. 05), while just one measure of paranoid thoughts used in the desktop environment was significantly associated with trait paranoia and solely one of the tested predictors (p <. 05). In addition, individuals assessed in VR reported higher levels of cognitive absorption than those assigned to a desktop-based assessment. Overall, findings of the present study suggest that VR may be better suited for the investigation of paranoid thoughts than desktop-based tools.
KW - assessment
KW - desktop
KW - paranoid thoughts
KW - predictors
KW - virtual reality
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85083757814&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1093/iwc/iwz027
DO - 10.1093/iwc/iwz027
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85083757814
SN - 0953-5438
VL - 31
SP - 413
EP - 424
JO - Interacting with Computers
JF - Interacting with Computers
IS - 4
ER -