Frontiers in Psychology (Feb 2024)

The efficacy of augmented reality exposure therapy in the treatment of spider phobia—a randomized controlled trial

  • Tomas Jurcik,
  • Svetlana Zaremba-Pike,
  • Vladimir Kosonogov,
  • Abdul-Raheem Mohammed,
  • Yulia Krasavtseva,
  • Yulia Krasavtseva,
  • Yulia Krasavtseva,
  • Tadamasa Sawada,
  • Tadamasa Sawada,
  • Tadamasa Sawada,
  • Tadamasa Sawada,
  • Irina Samarina,
  • Nilufar Buranova,
  • Peter Adu,
  • Nikita Sergeev,
  • Andrei Skuratov,
  • Anastasia Demchenko,
  • Yakov Kochetkov

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1214125
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15

Abstract

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The evidence for the use of Augmented Reality (AR) in treating specific phobias has been growing. However, issues of accessibility persist, especially in developing countries. The current study examined a novel, but relatively simple therapist guided smartphone-based AR Exposure Treatment (ARET) of spider phobia. Participants who reported symptoms of Arachnophobia were randomized into one of three comparison groups: ARET (n = 20), traditional in vivo exposure therapy (IVET; n = 18) and a waitlist control group (n = 17). Behavioral approach, subjective symptom measures, and galvanic skin response were assessed pre- and post-treatment. The study was concluded with a one-month follow up assessment. Results indicated that both treatment groups showed statistically significant and clinically meaningful improvements in behavioral approach at post-test that were maintained at 1 month follow- up, compared to the wait-listed group. Moreover, the treatment groups demonstrated significant improvements in subjective symptom report at 1-month follow up. Given its utility and potential accessibility, our findings suggest that future AR evaluation research could be conducted in therapy settings with minimal resources.

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