Using Augmented Reality To Treat Cockroach Phobia
RichDiesal writes "In this blog post, I describe a new use for augmented reality — treating people for cockroach phobia. A recent paper in the academic journal Cyberpsychology, Behavior and Social Networking discusses a system where people suffering from cockroach phobia sit at a desk with a virtual reality headset. The headset has a camera on the front so that patients see the desk they're sitting at — but covered in cockroaches. In the study, researchers managed to elicit a fear response to virtual cockroaches similar to what would be experienced with real cockroaches. Sounds like a little slice of hell to me."
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Wouldn't it be better that as soon as the glasses detect a cockroach they 'augment reality' by becoming completely opaque?
Do we really need electricity to replace what chemistry already does so well?
I scream. You scream. I assume that means we're both acquainted with the problem. We proceed.
Some people are afraid of what they can't see...
--- You shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you mad- Neal (not Cowboy) Boortz
Some phobias are disabling - agoraphobia, for instance, or a sufficiently developed fear of heights. Some phobias are inconvenient like fear of the number thirteen.
But fear of cockroaches? I call that healthy!
Unless your job requires you to go into cockroach-infested places and not freak out, I can't see any serious downside to cockroach phobia.
Dunx
Converting caffeine into code since 1982
My wife has an absolute fear and hatred for clowns, so much so that her Mother once sent her to clown school in order to try to shake the fear. Alas, I marry her and get stuck with the "fear" and cannot go anywhere or anything with our kids that might involve... clowns.
So, I have to ask if this augmented reality system might work for other fears such as this? Perhaps make it so an image of a clown appears on the faces of all that are gazed upon?
I have to wonder if it would cause more stress than cures though.
I got over my cockroach phobia pretty quickly after moving into my new house. They were coming into my house and I traced them back to the hole in the ground where the water meter is. My solution, not wanting to get too close, was to pour poison into hole. Ten minutes later my driveway, garage, and front yard were covered with dozens of stunned cockroaches that had crawled out of their makeshift cave looking for some other dark place to live, which included the firewood pile, every corner and edge of the building, and under my car tires. I had to round them up one by one (using a broom and dustpan!) and get rid of them. I collected them in a bucket, drowned them in more poison, and buried them. Not so afraid of cockroaches any more. But they still gross me out!
I'm sure you are and were very well-intentioned, but amateur counseling based on pop psychology is akin to amateur surgery with a shotgun. ;-)
You might consider a hobby with less potential danger like hand grenade tennis or blindfolded street racing.