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Adolescent Responses to Varying Environments in Virtual Reality Simulations

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Stress, Psychological
Stress, Physiological
Emotions
Residential Characteristics
Interventions
Other: Virtual reality
Registration Number
NCT04465240
Lead Sponsor
University of Southern California
Brief Summary

The objective of this study, named THRIVE (The Research In Virtual Environments Study), is to test hypotheses for how neighborhood environments influence stress and emotion, as a mechanism by which they may influence health. Neighborhood environments may have both acute influences on stress-related processes, but also may have lifespan effects due to the chronic, cumulative effects of repeated exposures and the long-term toll of adapting to adverse neighborhood environments. However, assessing neighborhood influences on stress and emotion is methodologically challenging. This study develops such a novel, alternative approach to address these questions by deploying a virtual reality (VR) based model of neighborhood disadvantage and affluence that creates an immersive experience approximating the experience of being in different neighborhoods. In this study, this model will be applied to understand neighborhood effects in a diverse sample of adolescents (n = 130) from a range of disadvantaged and affluent neighborhoods. The proposed study will employ a randomized experiment (n = 65 per condition), with online questionnaires and a single study session, to determine (a) if virtual exposure to neighborhood disadvantage elicits differences in emotion and stress reactivity; (2) if growing up in a disadvantaged neighborhood results in habituation or sensitization to different neighborhood characteristics; and (3) if chronic stress results in habituation or sensitization to different neighborhood characteristics. This research will develop an innovative methodology that will help establish the role that neighborhoods may play in eliciting stress as well as the processes of adaptation to chronic stress and chronic neighborhood exposures. In addition, it will help establish a method that can be utilized more broadly to study contextual and social environmental influences on psychological and biological risk in adolescence.

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
107
Inclusion Criteria
  • English speaking
  • Are able to use a dominant hand for joystick manipulation and a non- dominant hand for physiological measurements,
  • Are in good physical and mental health, with no self-reported history of hypertension, cardiovascular disease (CVD) or CVD treatment (with associated medication list indicative of treatments that result in exclusion),
  • Have hair at least 1cm in length based on self-report to be able to provide a hair sample.
Exclusion Criteria
  • Pregnant, by self-report

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Virtual reality simulation of neighborhood affluenceVirtual realityParticipants will attend one study session. They will watch a video during a baseline rest period. Participants will be assigned to navigate and explore the virtual neighborhood, representative of affluence they were assigned to. Then they will watch a video again during a recovery period.
Virtual reality simulation of neighborhood disadvantageVirtual realityParticipants will attend one study session. They will watch a video during a baseline rest period. Participants will be assigned to navigate and explore the virtual neighborhood representative of disadvantage they were assigned to. Then they will watch a video again during a recovery period.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Blood PressureMeasured in 5 epochs, typical 60-90 minutes total: (1) Baseline before virtual reality (VR), (2) VR neighborhood (11 minutes, average), (3) Questionnaires (begins 6 minutes after VR end, average), (4) Video: first 15 minutes, (5) Video, final 15 minutes

Systolic (SBP) and diastolic (DBP) blood pressure, in mmHG, measured and summarized across epochs in the study session.

Respiratory Sinus Arrhythmia (RSA)Measured in 5 epochs, typical 60-90 minutes total: (1) Baseline before virtual reality (VR), (2) VR neighborhood (11 minutes, average), (3) Questionnaires (begins 6 minutes after VR end, average), (4) Video: first 15 minutes, (5) Video, final 15 minutes

Respiratory Sinus Arrhythmia (RSA) reflects parasympathetic nervous systemt activity and is used as an index of emotion regulation, with higher scores indicating greater parasympathetic activation. It is derived from the natural log of the power of high frequency heart rate variability (heart rate variability is the variability in the amount of time in between heart beats, and high frequency heart rate variability is the power of activity in the 0.15-0.4 Hz range). Based on electrocardiograph signals measured and summarized across epochs in the study session.

Cardiac Output (CO)Measured in 5 epochs, typical 60-90 minutes total: (1) Baseline before virtual reality (VR), (2) VR neighborhood (11 minutes, average), (3) Questionnaires (begins 6 minutes after VR end, average), (4) Video: first 15 minutes, (5) Video, final 15 minutes

Cardiac Output (CO) represents the volume of blood pumped by the heart (L/min). Increasing values indicate greater volume of blood pumped per unit time. Derived from impedance cardiography signals measured and and then summarized across epochs in the study session.

Emotional ResponseImmediately after the virtual reality task (average of 28 minutes post baseline)

Multiple measures were used for emotion felt in the VR neighborhood:

1. Participants rate how strongly they felt 9 specific emotions (0-8 scale; 0 indicates none, 8 is the strongest possible feeling).

2. Two composite scores based on averaging responses for specific emotions: Positive emotion (enthusiasm, contentment, amusement) and Negative emotion (fear, sadness, disgust, anger). Averages were based on the standard score representing standard deviations above/below the mean. The mean score was 0. Positive emotion ranged from -1.9, the lowest positive emotion, to 2.0, the highest. Negative emotion ranged from -0.7, the lowest negative emotion, to 3.5, the highest. A positive score reflects greater than average for that type of emotion, and negative score reflects less than average for that type of emotion.

3. Self-Assessment Manikin (SAM) scale: two dimensional scales for how they felt, from (a) happy to unhappy (1 to 9), and (b) excited to calm (1 to 9) (Bradley \& Lang, 1994)

Total Peripheral Resistance (TPR)Measured in 5 epochs, typical 60-90 minutes total: (1) Baseline before virtual reality (VR), (2) VR neighborhood (11 minutes, average), (3) Questionnaires (begins 6 minutes after VR end, average), (4) Video: first 15 minutes, (5) Video, final 15 minutes

Total peripheral resistance (TPR) is an index of an index of vasoconstriction (mean arterial pressure divided by cardiac output). Increasing values indicate greater vasoconstriction. Derived from impedance cardiography signals measured and and then summarized across epochs in the study session.

Salivary CortisolMeasured 5 times: (1) end of baseline, (2) after virtual reality (VR) neighborhood (VR: 11 minutes, average), (3) after questionnaires (26 minutes after VR end, average), (4) video (recovery), after first 15 minutes, (5) after final 15 minutes of video

Concentration of the stress hormone cortisol in saliva samples, measured in (µg/dL), that participants provide over the course of the study session to assess cortisol response

Pre-ejection Period (PEP)Measured in 5 epochs, typical 60-90 minutes total: (1) Baseline before virtual reality (VR), (2) VR neighborhood (11 minutes, average), (3) Questionnaires (begins 6 minutes after VR end, average), (4) Video: first 15 minutes, (5) Video, final 15 minutes

Pre-ejection period (PEP) is a measure of sympathetic nervous system activation. Higher values indicate greater sympathetic activation. Derived from impedance cardiography (Q-point in ECG to B-point in impedance cardiography), signals are measured and and then summarized across epochs in the study session.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

University of Southern California / USC Suzanne Dworak-Peck School of Social Work

🇺🇸

Los Angeles, California, United States

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