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The VIRADIA study aims to validate and assess the reliability of a newly developed Virtual Reality (VR) diagnostic platform designed for neurological and cognitive testing. The goal is to determine whether the VR versions of nine commonly used clinical tests measure the same constructs and provide comparable results to their traditional face-to-face or paper-based forms.
The study includes two groups of participants: (1) healthy volunteers and (2) patients with neurological diagnoses. Each participant will complete both the standard and the VR versions of the tests, with the order of administration randomly assigned. The tested functions cover fine motor skills, gait and balance, attention, executive function, processing speed, and visuospatial abilities.
The following tests are included in the VR platform: 9-Hole Peg Test (9HPT), 6 Meter Walk Test, Timed Up and Go - Manual (TUG-M), Functional Reach Test (FRT), Symbol Digit Modalities Test (SDMT), Clock Drawing Test (CDT), Trail Making Test (TMT A/B), Stroop Test, and SATURN Test.
Participants will first provide informed consent and basic demographic information. They will then complete all tests in both modalities (standard and VR), with appropriate breaks between tasks.
The study is observational, within-subjects, and paired in design. Primary outcomes include correlation and agreement between VR and standard test scores (validity). Data will be analyzed using paired statistical methods, including Pearson/Spearman correlations, Bland-Altman analysis, and Intraclass Correlation Coefficients (ICC).
No medication or invasive intervention is used in this study. The VR testing is non-invasive and carries minimal risk. The study has been approved by the Ethics Committee of the Nitra Self-Governing Region (Approval No. 09I05-03-804).
The results will provide evidence for the validity and reliability of VR-based diagnostics and support the use of the VIRADIA platform as a safe, standardized tool for neurological and cognitive assessment.
Full description
The VIRADIA validation study investigates the psychometric properties-validity and reliability-of a Virtual Reality (VR) diagnostic platform designed for neurological and cognitive assessment. The platform includes VR adaptations of nine established clinical tests commonly used in neurology and neuropsychology. These tests evaluate fine motor coordination, gait and balance, processing speed, attention, and executive functioning.
The study follows an observational, within-subjects, paired design. Each participant completes both the standard (paper-based or face-to-face) version and the corresponding VR version of all tests. The order of modalities is counterbalanced across participants to control for order effects. Two groups are enrolled:
Objectives
Procedures
After informed consent, demographic and clinical data (age, gender, education, diagnosis, medication) are recorded. Participants complete all tests under both conditions (standard and VR). After testing, participants fill out a short questionnaire on VR tolerability and subjective experience.
Data Collection and Sample Size
The study aims to include 200 participants (100 healthy, 100 patients). The target sample size was determined using a priori power analysis for paired ROC/AUC comparisons (AUC ≥ 0.75, ΔAUC ≤ 0.05, α = 0.05, power = 0.90), with an additional 15% margin for attrition.
Statistical Analyses
Ethical Considerations
The study is non-invasive and presents minimal risk. No experimental drug, device, or biological material is used. All participants provide informed consent prior to participation. The study has been approved by the Ethics Committee of the Nitra Self-Governing Region (Approval No. 09I05-03-804).
Expected Outcomes
The study will produce empirical evidence supporting the validity, reliability, and clinical utility of the VIRADIA platform. This validation will enable the integration of standardized VR-based diagnostics into neurological practice and contribute to early detection of neurodegenerative disorders in both clinical and home settings.
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200 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Martin Polak, Dr.; Andrej Gero, Ing.
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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