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Schema therapy helps people understand which emotional needs were not met during childhood, and how they can take care of those needs now. One important part of the therapy is the chairwork exercise, where people imagine talking to different parts of themselves (like the strict parent or the hurt child) using empty chairs. These exercises can be very helpful, but they can also be difficult for people who find it hard to imagine things in their mind.
Virtual Reality (VR) can make these exercises easier and more powerful. VR creates a 3D world that feels real, using special equipment like a headset. In this world, people can see and interact with virtual characters that represent different parts of themselves. This can make the therapy more concrete and easier to understand, especially for people who struggle with imagination.
In this study, we want to compare the regular imagination-based exercise with the chairwork exercise done in Virtual Reality. Everyone who joins the study will do both versions of the exercise-one with imagination and one with VR. The order will be random. Before and after each exercise, we will do a short assessment to see how people feel. At the end, we will also do a short interview to hear about their experience. The whole session will take about 1.5 hours.
We want to know if people experience the VR exercise differently than the regular imagination exercise. We also want to know if these differences depend on how well someone can imagine things in their mind.
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30 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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