Researchers Create Virtual Reality 'Parties' To Treat Drug Addiction
Jason Koebler (3528235) writes To help people overcome drug addiction, researchers at the University of Houston's Graduate School of Social Work are building hyper-realistic virtual worlds to recreate situations that trigger cravings for nicotine, alcohol, weed, and now, hard drugs like heroin. Traditional relapse therapy usually involves roleplaying: Therapists often pretend to be a friend or some other familiar person and offer the patient their drug of choice in order to teach them avoidance strategies. By strapping patients into a virtual reality headset and running them through a familiar scenario where they commonly use the drug, like a party, the treatment can be much more realistic and effective, researchers say (video).
It's a viscous cycle
Many respectable physicists said that they weren't going to stand for this, partly because it was a debasement of science, but mostly because they didn't get invited to those sorts of parties.
-Douglas Adams
systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
I know these methods are about as close as they can get to the real thing - but anyone in this "therapy" already knows that the right answer is always no. The person only has to make a real decision if they are in the real situation.
havent been to one of em nicotine parties in a while....
where can you download one of these uh parties.?
researchers at the University of Houston's Graduate School of Social Work are building hyper-realistic virtual worlds
I'm not sure about "hyper-realistic". :) Sprite characters which say a pre-recorded line when you trigger them? Whoopy. Actually, looking at the video, it resembles a lot the game Under a Killing Moon from 1994.
Despite the slightly crusty appearance, I do not want to completely stomp the idea though.
Just guessing
So essentially I can use my Occulus Rift as virtual beer goggles then?
Monstar L
that this is really stupid. Maybe it will help the non real addicts that people think need help, but those of us who are true addicts it's about our will power, nothing less. Back when I was strung out on heroin, it didn't matter if I went to rehab, got clean, i would be strung out again within 1 week once I got left to my own ends.
What got me to quit was getting help for some of my mental issues, and me getting completely sick of the junky scene. I hated being dope sick. I hated the crap I did to stay well. I learned to remember all the bad shit associated with being a heroin addict, and I left that as a reminder in my mind on what the path leads to.
On top of that, I got as far away from other users as possible. I don't want to associate with them, hang with them, even talk to them. Fuck that. If you think you can still be friends with addicts/users, you are mistaken. If they can't get clean, screw them, they will only pull you down.
There is plenty to do without hanging around people who use/abuse drugs. If you really want to stay clean, you accept that as reality and change your life, otherwise you are just setting yourself up to fail on purpose.
Be seeing you...
So these parties... Can they be like gang bangs or orgies or maybe just a virtual BJ behind a virtual dumpster behind the virtual Walmart?
Without reading the original article, that looks like a direct ripoff from Virtually Betters stuff that's been out for years. http://www.virtuallybetter.com...
I was hooked on heroin for 15 years and I've been going to the methadone clinic for the last 5 and I don't want help. Opiates are the only thing that cured my depression issues and yes I've tried almost all anti-depressants very bad results. Paxil ended with attempted suicide which put me in a coma for six weeks.
#1 I take offense with every involvement with drugs being abuse or addiction. I find cigarettes ti be much worse of an addiction than any narcotic. :) :)
#2 We invited tons of shrinks, lawyers, and that sort of thing to our LSD parties
#3 Virtual party is at best gonna help a small segment, since well, not everyone needs a party to do drugs.
#4 If your self control is so low that you would invovle yourself with anything like heroin you have to be stupid; look at the crowd using it.
#5 I love drugs. All drugs. Drugs are wonderful, and odds are you love and are on drugs right now and you don't even know it.
#6 "Narcotics lists"/"schedules" is nothign but a mere fluke; narcotics only describe drugs derived from the opium poppy.
#7 Do your own research, and take everything you "hear" 2nd hand with a grain of salt.
#8 Weed? really?? You know, new study suggests that the mixing with tobacco has an incredibly habit forming effect as opposed to the pure herb.
#9 Standing invitation to the author - obviously you didn't get invited to a lot of fun parties: got a blotter and and some buds with your name on them.
#10 Have a nice trip
I can kind of see this working for nicotine - it's a pretty social drug - and I can't speak towards alcohol. And the fact that they're using this for weed is just funny.
But this will never work for heroin. The internal pressures are 1000 times stronger than any external pressures could ever be. What "triggers" my usage when I'm trying to quit? It's not being at a party, or having a friend pressure me. It's lying in bed, aching and fatigued and going between soaking the sheets with foul sweat and shivering like crazy every 3 minutes. Feeling a craving not unlike that which you feel for air after holding your breath too long. Knowing that I can take away the sickness, give myself the "air" I'm craving and needed, AND put myself in a state of post-coital, wrapped-up-in-a-warm-blanket, just-won-the-lottery bliss. All I have to do is put off quitting one day. Yeah, tomorrow would be better anyway...
(Posting AC for obvious reasons)
What's up with lumping marijuana in with dangerous addictive drugs like alcohol, nicotine, and heroin?
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Comment removed based on user account deletion
Heroine is a bitch! I'm addicted to Katniss.
http://www.wired.com/2012/03/katniss-everdeen-hollywood-heroines/
I think the entire approach is wrong-headed. Why would it be acceptable for someone who's attempting to recover from addiction hang out with people who are still using - people who would encourage them to use again, in spite of the typically massive damage to their so-called "friend's" life that landed them in rehab in the first place?