City
Epaper

Psychosocial stress, anxiety can be reduced by virtual training

By IANS | Published: June 18, 2022 12:06 PM

Tokyo, June 18 Virtual training among several people may reduce psychosocial stress and anxiety, a new study suggests....

Open in App

Tokyo, June 18 Virtual training among several people may reduce psychosocial stress and anxiety, a new study suggests.

The study indicates that physical exercise benefits our overall well-being. But for some such as neurological patients, people suffering from cardiovascular disease, and hospitalised patients physical exercise is not feasible, or even too dangerous.

However, similar effects may be brought about using Immersive Virtual Reality (IVR).

"While a moderate amount of exposure to stress might be beneficial, repeated and increased exposure can be detrimental to our health," said researcher Dalila Burin

Despite initially designed for entertainment, IVR has attracted interest from the academic community because of its potential use for clinical purposes, since it allows the user to experience a virtual world through a virtual body.

In a previous study, the team found that looking at a moving virtual body displayed in first-person perspective induces physiological changes. Heart rates increased/decreased coherently with the virtual movements, even though the young participants remained still.

Consequently, acute cognitive and neural benefits occurred, just like after real physical activity.

In a followup study, the same benefits were also found on healthy elderly subjects after 20-minute sessions occurring twice a week for six weeks.

In the current study, published in the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, the researchers explored the effect on stress, adding another level to the beneficial effects of virtual training.

Young healthy subjects, while sitting still, experienced a virtual training displayed from the first-person perspective, creating the illusion of ownership over movements.

The avatar ran at 6.4 km/h for 30 minutes. Before and after the virtual training, the researchers induced and assessed the psychosocial stress response by measuring the salivary alpha-amylase a crucial biomarker indicating the levels of neuroendocrine stress. Similarly, they distributed a subjective questionnaire for anxiety.

The results showed a decreased psychosocial stress response and lower levels of anxiety after the virtual training, comparable to what happens after real exercise.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Dalila burin despiteIvr
Open in App

Related Stories

BusinessFurnitech Luxe Introduces the Iris Collection

BusinessThe NEW Shop ropes in Rajkummar Rao as brand ambassador: unveils expansion plans for 10000+ convenience stores by 2030

BusinessHitachi Trusts OneDios to Book Hassle-Free Online Customer Care Request

BusinessDaikin chooses OneDios for uninterrupted and extended customer care services

BusinessVoltas joins hands with OneDios App to cut short customer care service request process

Health Realted Stories

HealthKids who’re sedentary for over 6 hours a day at high fatty liver disease risk

HealthStress in childhood associated with earlier drug use in teens: Study

HealthTN Food Safety Department seals retail outlet for selling bottled breast milk

HealthIndian-origin researcher developing vessel-chip for pharmaceutical drug testing

HealthAntimicrobial resistance among top health threats, over 2 people die every minute: Experts