Audio By Carbonatix
People suffering from social anxiety could be helped to overcome their fears by viewing themselves taking part in virtual scenarios, research from the University of East Anglia suggests.
New imaging technology allowed six participants to rehearse their behaviour in a range of social settings.
They were able to practise small talk and maintain eye contact, for example.
Researchers said it could be used with cognitive behavioural therapy.
UEA researchers created more than 100 different virtual scenarios, such as using public transport, buying a drink at a bar, socialising at a party, shopping, and talking to a stranger in an art gallery.
They then asked six young men recovering from psychosis who also have debilitating social anxiety to take part in the video scenes.
The participants were able to see their own life-size image projected onto a real-time video scene while experiencing social interaction.
Practice makes perfect
Dr Lina Gega, of the university's Norwich Medical School, said: "People with social anxiety are afraid that they will draw attention to themselves and be negatively judged by others in social situations.
"Many will either avoid public places and social gatherings altogether, or use safety behaviours to cope, such as not making eye contact.
"Paradoxically, this sort of behaviour draws attention to people with social anxiety and feeds into their beliefs that they don't fit in.
"We wanted to see whether practising social situations in a virtual environment could help."
The virtual environments encouraged participants to practise small talk, maintain eye contact and resist safety behaviour such as looking at the floor or being hyper-vigilant, she said.
When used as part of a course of therapy, researchers found that these virtual environments helped participants notice their anxious behaviour and change it.
They could also rehearse their behaviour over and over again.
As a result, participants were able to take greater social risks, the research found.
'Weird' experience
One participant said that his confidence about going to the pub and socialising with people "in real life" increased from 30% at the beginning of the first behavioural experiment to 50% at the end of the last experiment.
But another participant commented that the virtual experience was not "real" and seeing himself interact live on screen was unusual. He added that virtual environments were not as good as doing it in ''real life'' and that the whole experience was ''weird''.
The research is published in the journal Cyberpsychology, Behaviour and Social Networking.
Paul Strickland, of Xenodu, the company behind the virtual environment system, said it was designed to cater for the needs of socially anxious people.
"It isn't a head-mounted display, which anxious people may find uncomfortable.
"Instead, the user observes from an out-of-body perspective. They can then simultaneously view themselves and interact with the characters of the film."
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
African Armwrestling Championships: Accra Mayor promises jobs for 30 Ghanaian athletes after medal haul
55 minutes -
Starmer under pressure, as Labour suffers heavy election losses
59 minutes -
Wife allegedly butchers husband in deadly fight over charcoal money
2 hours -
Anger and resignation in Tenerife as hantavirus ship approaches
2 hours -
‘This nonsense must stop’ – UGBS Dean Prof. Bawole slams exploitation of BECE leavers for social media content
3 hours -
Asamoah Gyan fears for Black Stars as Kudus’ injury rocks World Cup plans
4 hours -
Ofori Panin school nurse killed in solo motorcycle crash
4 hours -
‘Give us two weeks’ – NIA Management pleads for calm as strike deadline looms
5 hours -
World Shea Expo 2026 launched in Wa as gov’t moves to restrict raw nut exports
5 hours -
TGMA 2026: The night ahead; who wins what?
5 hours -
Prime Insight to examine Charles Amissah report, growing NDC succession debate this Saturday
5 hours -
Kenyasi Government Hospital faces infrastructure and equipment challenges despite top performance rankings
6 hours -
Energy ministry sets up control and command centre to improve response time to power challenges
6 hours -
North East Regional Minister highlights major development gains at maiden Government Accountability Series
7 hours -
Trump says Russia and Ukraine to observe three-day ceasefire
7 hours