Choosing a phobia

A phobia is an irrational fear resulting in a conscious avoidance of the specific feared object, activity, or situation [davison 86]. There are many different kinds of phobias. This chapter will give some background and explanation of these phobias. After explaining the different phobias, an explanation will be given why one specific phobia was selected to be treated.

Most of the information comes from the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders [dsm 87]. This book is considered the bible for psychologists. It contains all the different disorders, how to recognize, features, age of onset, etc.

Anxiety disorders

Anxiety is a diffuse, highly unpleasant, often vague feeling of apprehension, accompanied by one or more bodily sensations. Anxiety comes in response to a threat that is unknown, internal, vague, or conflictual in origin [kaplan 91]. Anxiety disorders are those disorders that are most commonly found in the general population [dsm 87]. That is why we decided to take a closer look at this group of disorders. Anxiety disorders can be subdivided into five groups:
  1. Panic disorder with or without agoraphobia
  2. Agoraphobia without panic disorder
  3. Simple phobia
  4. Social phobia
  5. Obsessive compulsive disorder
The following sections will explain each of these disorders.

Panic disorder with or without agoraphobia

Agoraphobia is the fear of being in places or situations from which escape might be difficult, or embarrassing, or in which help might not be available in the event of a panic attack.

Essential to panic disorder with or without agoraphobia are recurrent panic attacks. A panic attack is an unexpected period of intense fear or discomfort. For a patient to be diagnosed as suffering from panic disorder, the subject must have had at least four attacks in a month, or an attack followed by a month of fear for another attack. Another diagnostic criteria for panic disorder is when at least four of the symptoms from Table 4.1 can be found and there is no organic factor that initiated the attack.

Table 4.1 Symptoms of panic disorder

If there are less than four of these symptoms it is called agoraphobia without panic disorder.

In a great majority of panic disorders, there is also agoraphobia. The subject will develop some symptoms of agoraphobia as protection against panic disorders. When the subject has agoraphobia, he will not leave the house, stand in a crowd, bus or line unless accompanied. With agoraphobia, the subject is impaired in his social life. When agoraphobia is severe, a person can be completely housebound.

When the subject does not suffer from agoraphobia, there is no or limited impact in his social life or occupational functioning.

Agoraphobia without panic disorder

The essential feature of this disorder is agoraphobia without a history of panic attacks. Usually the subject is afraid of having a panic attack with a limited number of the symptoms described in the previous section. This can be caused by the fact that the subject has had such an attack before or never had such an attack but is afraid that it could develop.

Social phobia

Social phobia is the fear of doing something or acting in way that will be humiliating or embarrassing in front of others. Different kinds of social phobias are not being able to speak in public, choking on food when eating in front of others or having hand tremors when writing in front of others.

Unlike agoraphobia, social phobia has an immediate response when the subject is confronted with the situation. For example, a subject having a fear of eating in front of people, when forced to eat with other people, will have an immediate anxiety response. He will, for instance, choke on his food.

Simple phobia

Essential to this disorder is the fact that there exists a persistent fear of a circumscribed stimulus other than having fear of a panic attack or of humiliation or embarrassment. Most common simple phobias in the general population are, in order of appearance, animals, storms, heights, illness, injury and death. Simple phobias are common in the general population [kaplan 91].

There is invariably an immediate response when the patient is exposed to the simple phobic stimulus. The response can vary from feeling panicky, sweating to difficulty breathing. For example, a person afraid of spiders will immediately react when shown an image of a spider.

Obsessive compulsive disorder

Essential here is the recurrent obsessions or compulsions sufficiently severe to interfere with the persons normal life. Obsessions are persistent ideas, impulses or images that are as intrusive as senseless. Compulsions are repetitive, purposeful and intentional behaviors that are performed in response to an obsession. Obsessions can be the repeated impulses of a parent to kill its child or the fear of becoming infected by shaking hands. Compulsions can be hand washing or counting.

What phobia to use

People suffering from panic disorder with or without agoraphobia are those who most often seek professional treatment. Finding people who suffer from this form of anxiety disorder for an experiment should not be too difficult. The problem with this disorder is that the panic attack is unexpected. To test the level of presence, however, we want an immediate response to the situation.

Agoraphobia without panic disorder has the same problem as panic disorder with or without agoraphobia. With agoraphobia without panic disorder, there is again the suddenness of the anxiety. However, we want the subject to react immediately to the given stimuli.

With social phobia, people react immediately to the stimuli. The disadvantage is that it requires other people to be present. People are hard to model in Virtual Reality since each of them should have its own personality and behavior.

Obsessive compulsive disorder is relatively normal in the general population in its mild form. The problem here is that we want a reaction to the stimuli that is easy to recognize. When it is only a mild form of the disorder, it might make it more difficult to recognize it and thus the level of presence.

Simple phobia has a clear stimuli, and does not require difficult interactions. Since it is the most common of anxiety disorders, it should not be hard to find enough subjects for the experiment. Because of all of these reasons and because there were no clear disadvantages, it was decided to use a simple phobia.

After deciding to treat people with a simple phobia, the question was what phobia to use? Claustrophobia, the fear of enclosed spaces, was eliminated because the experiment would require people to wear an HMD. Fear of flying and fear of storms depended too much on sound. To make these as realistic as possible, we needed good sound capabilities. The sound capabilities of SVE were not yet fully operational when we had to make a decision. This made us drop fear of flying and fear of storms. After some more discussion in the Virtual Environments group and with the psychologists, it was decided to treat people suffering of acrophobia, fear of heights.

Having decided to treat people suffering from acrophobia, a method was needed to treat these people. The following chapter will explain the different treatments and explain why one was chosen to use in VR. After deciding what treatment to use, a method was chosen to build the environments. Finally, a list of requirements will follow that came from the treatment and the development method.


What is presence? Treatment and environments TOC
Rob Kooper
kooper@cc.gatech.edu

Last modified: Wed Aug 9 12:15:00 GMT 1995