Psychiatry Investig.  2011 Jun;8(2):155-160.

The Effect of Repeated Virtual Nicotine Cue Exposure Therapy on the Psychophysiological Responses: A Preliminary Study

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Psychiatry, SMG-SNU Boramae Medical Center, Seoul, Korea.
  • 2Department of Neuropsychiatry, Seoul National University Hospital, Seoul, Korea. basuare@paran.com
  • 3Han Young Foreign Language High School, Seoul, Korea.

Abstract


OBJECTIVE
Smoking related cues may elicit smoking urges and psychophysiological responses in subjects with nicotine dependence. This study aimed to investigate the effect of repeated virtual cue exposure therapy using the surround-screen based projection wall system on the psychophysiological responses in nicotine dependence.
METHODS
The authors developed 3-dimensional neutral and smoking-related environments using virtual reality (VR) technology. Smoking-related environment was a virtual bar, which comprised both object-related and social situation cues. Ten subjects with nicotine dependence participated in 4-week (one session per week) virtual cue exposure therapy. Psychophysiological responses [electromyography (EMG), skin conductance (SC), and heart rate] and subjective nicotine craving were acquired during each session.
RESULTS
VR nicotine cue elicited greater psychophysiological responses and subjective craving for smoking than did neutral cue, and exposure to social situation cues showed greater psychophysiological responses in SC and EMG than did object-related cues. This responsiveness decreased during the course of repeated therapy.
CONCLUSION
The present study found that both psychophysiological responses and subjective nicotine craving were greater to nicotine cue exposure via projection wall VR system than to neutral cues and that enhanced cue reactivity decreased gradually over the course of repeated exposure therapy. These results suggest that VR cue exposure therapy combined with psychophysiological response monitoring may be an alternative treatment modality for smoking cessation, although the current findings are preliminary.

Keyword

Virtual reality; Nicotine dependence; Craving; Psychophysiological response

MeSH Terms

Cues
Heart
Implosive Therapy
Nicotine
Skin
Smoke
Smoking
Smoking Cessation
Tobacco Use Disorder
Nicotine
Smoke
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