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One hundred participants with acquired brain injury (ABI) will be included in a randomized controlled trial, with one group playing a commercially available VR game and the control group doing activities in their everyday as cognitive training. The trial aims to investigate how VR can affect processing speed in the ABI population, and if these effects can transfer into everyday activities. The training will be performed in the participants homes, with assistance provided by the project group via phone or video conference. The training period will last five weeks. Participant's cognitive functions will be measured with questionnaires and neuropsychological tests at the start of the training period, at the end of training and sixteen weeks after the start of the intervention. In depth experiences with VR as a training method will be gathered through performing focus group interviews with some of the participants from the VR group, in addition to self-reported questionnaires from all the participants.
Full description
A randomized controlled trial (RCT) will be conducted where the experimental intervention is playing a commercial VR game. The VR group will follow a training regime of a 30 min VR session five times per week for 5 weeks. The control group will carry on with treatment as usual, in addition, participants will receive an information booklet covering cognitive training in everyday life. Baseline and outcome measures in terms of neuropsychological assessment and questionnaires will be performed at baseline (T1), at the end of the intervention period (T2) and at the 16-week follow-up (T3).
The VR group will train with a rhythm VR game that is considered as a good candidate for basic training of the multifaceted aspects of attention including speed of information processing, selection, sustained attention, shifting/dividing of attention, and working memory.
The VR game is selected on the grounds of clinical experience with VR training of processing speed, attention and working memory, and is also suggested in research as suitable games for cognitive rehabilitation.
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100 participants in 2 patient groups
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Sveinung Tornås, PhD; Marianne Løvstad, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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