- ICH GCP
- US Clinical Trials Registry
- Clinical Trial NCT03128099
Virtual Reality Training for Social Skills in Schizophrenia (VR-SS)
Physiology-based Virtual Reality Training for Social Skills in Schizophrenia
Social impairments are core features of schizophrenia that lead to poor outcome. Social skills and competence improve quality of life and protect against stress-related exacerbation of symptoms, while supporting resilience, interpersonal interactions, and social affiliation. To improve outcome, we must remediate social deficits. Existing psychosocial interventions are moderately effective but the effort-intensive nature (high burden), low adherence, and weak transfer of skills to everyday life present significant hurdles toward recovery. Thus, there is a dire need to develop effective, engaging and low-burden social interventions for people with schizophrenia that will result in better compliance rates and functional outcome.
The investigators will test the effectiveness of a novel adaptive virtual reality (VR) intervention in improving targeted social cognitive function (social attention, as indexed by eye scanning patterns) in individuals with schizophrenia. VR technology offers a flexible alternative to conventional therapies, with several advantages, including a simplified and low-stress social interaction environment with targeted opportunities to simulate, exercise and reinforce basic elements of social skills in a very wide range of realistic scenarios, and to repeat exposure to naturalistic situations from multiple angles.
Study Overview
Status
Conditions
Intervention / Treatment
Detailed Description
Social impairments present a major barrier toward good outcome in schizophrenia (SZ). Social skills and social competence protect against stress-related exacerbation of symptoms while supporting interpersonal interactions and social affiliation that help enhance the quality of life. Improving social functions could lead to better outcome and reduce healthcare costs and societal burden. Pharmacotherapy has shown to be inadequate in improving social impairments in schizophrenia, and although existing psychosocial interventions can be moderately effective, the time- and effort-intensive nature (high-burden), low adherence, and weak transfer of skills to real life present significant hurdles. Thus, there is a strong need to develop effective and low-burden social interventions that can be personalized to optimize learning and increase adherence.
Virtual reality (VR) technology offers a very promising alternative to conventional interventions, with several advantages. Controllable complexity of the VR world provides a simplified and low-stress social interaction environment with targeted opportunities to simulate, exercise and reinforce basic elements of social skills and to repeat exposure to naturalistic situations from multiple angles. Simulation of a wide variety of social situations that allows for targeted practice is crucial for learning and transfer of skills. In our proposed VR system, the capacity for personalized social skills training is achieved by automatic and adaptive feedback, based on the affective and attentional states of the participant in real-time, using closed-loop, emotion-sensing VR technology that integrates physiological signals, eye-tracking data and performance data from the participants to rapidly adjust the task parameters. This approach enables realistic, and adaptive interactions in VR games to provide scaffolded social skills exercises in an engaging and enjoyable manner.
The major aim of this proposal is to implement a personalized VR-based social skills training program with high efficacy for individuals with SZ by capitalizing on innovations in adaptive, emotion-sensing technology, designed to increase engagement and learning. This work will be conducted in two phases. The R21 phase will focus on implementing an adaptive social intervention VR game, optimizing the dose and measuring targeted social cognitive outcome. Upon meeting the milestones of the R21 (see 'Approach'), the R33 project will evaluate the feasibility of recruitment, and retention of SZ participants in a pilot randomized controlled trial (RCT) of VR training compared with an active control condition and assess long-term outcome.
The long-term goal of this proposal is to develop and implement a personalized social intervention method for individuals with schizophrenia that is efficacious, low-burden, enjoyable, and with generalizable and enduring benefits. Within the R21 phase, a physiology-based, closed-loop, adaptive VR task will be developed to determine the optimal dose for improving targeted social functions in individuals with SZ. If these goals are met for the R21 phase, a pilot RCT will be conducted in R33 to compare the social, cognitive, neural effects of adaptive social VR versus an active control condition. Furthermore, the physiological and eye tracking data and the outcome data from both R21 and R33 phases will be used to refine and improve this VR protocol and technology. It is hoped that the results of this study will lead to a large scale RCT in the future, and the implementation of a portable, low-cost and widely available intervention that can be personalized for optimal learning. In short, the investigators will implement an efficacious, engaging, low-burden, VR intervention to ameliorate social impairments of SZ and improve functional outcome.
Study Type
Enrollment (Actual)
Phase
- Not Applicable
Contacts and Locations
Study Locations
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Tennessee
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Nashville, Tennessee, United States, 37240
- Vanderbilt University
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-
Participation Criteria
Eligibility Criteria
Ages Eligible for Study
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Genders Eligible for Study
Description
Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria:
Individuals with Schizophrenia:
- DSM-5 Axis 1 Diagnosis of schizophrenia
- No DSM 5 Axis 1 diagnosis other than schizophrenia
- No diagnosed organic brain disease, brain lesions, history of head traumas, neurological disorders or other conditions that involve the degeneration of the central nervous system (e.g. multiple sclerosis)
- No substance/alcohol abuse/dependence during the past 1 year
- No tardive dyskinesia
- WASI IQ> 90
- Currently taking antipsychotic medication
- No change in current psychotropic medications or housing within the past 30 days. Those patients whose medication or housing situation has changed within a month, we will wait list them until their situation stabilizes.
Inclusion and exclusion criteria for the healthy control group:
- No DSM-5 Axis 1 diagnosis of psychotic disorders in themselves or their families (e.g. schizophrenia, bipolar disorder).
- No antipsychotic medications
- No diagnosed organic brain disease, brain lesions, history of head traumas, neurological disorders or other conditions that involve the degeneration of the central nervous system (e.g. multiple sclerosis)
- No substance/alcohol abuse/dependence during the past 1 year
- WAIS IQ > 90.
Study Plan
How is the study designed?
Design Details
- Primary Purpose: Basic Science
- Allocation: Randomized
- Interventional Model: Parallel Assignment
- Masking: Double
Arms and Interventions
Participant Group / Arm |
Intervention / Treatment |
|---|---|
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Experimental: Low dose VR social skills training
In the low dose condition, participants play the video game for one hour per session.
This is a behavioral intervention study.
The intervention is playing the social skills virtual reality game to exercise social skills with avatar characters.
|
Participants play a virtual reality video game involving social interactions with various characters ( avatars) at a bus stop, a cafeteria and a grocery store.
The games become progressively more complex as the participant improves task performance.
Eye tracking patterns are recorded throughout the game to observe the patterns of social attention
Other Names:
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Experimental: High dose Low dose VR social skills training
In the high dose condition, participants play the same video game twice per session (it takes them two hours).
This is a behavioral intervention study.
The intervention is playing the social skills virtual reality game to exercise social skills with avatar characters.
|
Participants play a virtual reality video game involving social interactions with various characters ( avatars) at a bus stop, a cafeteria and a grocery store.
The games become progressively more complex as the participant improves task performance.
Eye tracking patterns are recorded throughout the game to observe the patterns of social attention
Other Names:
|
|
No Intervention: Healthy Control Participants
23 healthy control participants were recruited and consented to yield baseline comparison data.
These participants did not undergo VR training.
Only baseline comparison data were collected.
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What is the study measuring?
Primary Outcome Measures
Outcome Measure |
Measure Description |
Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
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Social Attention: Social Engagement Latency (SEL)
Time Frame: 5 weeks
|
Social Engagement Latency (SEL), defined as the time taken to select an avatar by fixating eye gaze at the chosen avatar's face to initiate a new social 'mission'. This is an ecologically valid index that corresponds to one's readiness to initiate a social interaction. To start a social 'mission', the participant must choose an avatar by fixating on a semi-transparent green patch that covers the avatar's face. When the participant fixates on the avatar's face, the green patch disappears to reveal the avatar's face, which starts the social mission game. The time takes to remove the green patch to reveal the avatar's face is the SEL, our primary social attention target and a useful index of pro-social attention engagement. |
5 weeks
|
Collaborators and Investigators
Sponsor
Collaborators
Investigators
- Principal Investigator: Sohee Park, PhD, Vanderbilt University
- Principal Investigator: Nilanjan Sarkar, PhD, Vanderbilt University
Publications and helpful links
General Publications
- Adery LH, Ichinose M, Torregrossa LJ, Wade J, Nichols H, Bekele E, Bian D, Gizdic A, Granholm E, Sarkar N, Park S. The acceptability and feasibility of a novel virtual reality based social skills training game for schizophrenia: Preliminary findings. Psychiatry Res. 2018 Dec;270:496-502. doi: 10.1016/j.psychres.2018.10.014. Epub 2018 Oct 9.
- Torregrossa LJ, Bian D, Wade J, Adery LH, Ichinose M, Nichols H, Bekele E, Sarkar N, Park S. Decoupling of spontaneous facial mimicry from emotion recognition in schizophrenia. Psychiatry Res. 2019 May;275:169-176. doi: 10.1016/j.psychres.2019.03.035. Epub 2019 Mar 20.
- Wade J, Nichols HS, Ichinose M, Bian D, Bekele E, Snodgress M, Amat AZ, Granholm E, Park S, Sarkar N. Extraction of Emotional Information via Visual Scanning Patterns: A Feasibility Study of Participants with Schizophrenia and Neurotypical Individuals. ACM Trans Access Comput. 2018 Nov;11(4):23. doi: 10.1145/3282434.
- Roberts MT, Lloyd J, Valimaki M, Ho GW, Freemantle M, Bekefi AZ. Video games for people with schizophrenia. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2021 Feb 4;2(2):CD012844. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD012844.pub2.
Study record dates
Study Major Dates
Study Start (Actual)
Primary Completion (Actual)
Study Completion (Actual)
Study Registration Dates
First Submitted
First Submitted That Met QC Criteria
First Posted (Actual)
Study Record Updates
Last Update Posted (Actual)
Last Update Submitted That Met QC Criteria
Last Verified
More Information
Terms related to this study
Additional Relevant MeSH Terms
Other Study ID Numbers
- MH106748
Plan for Individual participant data (IPD)
Plan to Share Individual Participant Data (IPD)?
Drug and device information, study documents
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated drug product
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated device product
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