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Journal Article

Citation

Chen K, Barnes-Horowitz N, Treanor M, Sun M, Young KS, Craske MG. Front. Psychol. 2021; 11.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, Frontiers Research Foundation)

DOI

10.3389/fpsyg.2020.613617

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Anhedonia is a risk factor for suicide and poor treatment response in depressed individuals. Most evidence-based psychological therapies target symptoms of heightened negative affect (e.g., negative inferential style) instead of deficits in positive affect (e.g., attenuated reward response) and typically show little benefit for anhedonia. Viewing positive scenes through virtual reality (VR) has been shown to increase positive affect and holds great promise for addressing anhedonic symptoms. In this pilot study, six participants with clinically significant depression completed 13 sessions of exposure to positive scenes in a controlled VR environment. Significant decreases were found in self-reported anhedonia, depression, anxiety, and impairments in functioning from baseline to 1-month follow-up. Negative affect decreased over all 13 sessions, and positive affect increased over sessions 8-13.

RESULTS suggest that positive experiences in VR may be a novel avenue for the treatment of anhedonia in depressed individuals. © Copyright © 2021 Chen, Barnes-Horowitz, Treanor, Sun, Young and Craske.


Language: en

Keywords

treatment; depression; emotion; anhedonia; virtual reality; positive affect

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