VR mobile biofeedback breathing training was not perceived as more effective than smartphone training for relaxation or intention to use, but breathing detection accuracy was perceived as non-inferior.
Does VR MBBT improve perceived effectiveness and intention to use compared to smartphone MBBT?
67 participants in a within-subject laboratory study
VR mobile biofeedback breathing training (MBBT)
Smartphone mobile biofeedback breathing training (MBBT)
Perceived (relaxation) effectiveness, intention to use, and perceived breathing detection accuracypatient reported
VR biofeedback breathing training does not offer significant advantages over smartphone-based training in perceived effectiveness or intention to use.
Slow breathing holds promise in strengthening mental resilience and reducing acute stress. Prior work presented distinct prototypes of smartphone and VR mobile biofeedback breathing trainings (MBBTs) but lacked direct comparisons. This study aimed to evaluate whether a VR MBBT offers advantages over smartphone MBBT in perceived (relaxation) effectiveness and intention to use, while maintaining non-inferiority in perceived breathing detection accuracy. A within-subject laboratory study with 67 participants was conducted. No evidence was found that the VR MBBT was perceived as more effective. The breathing detection algorithm, originally optimized for smartphones, was perceived as non-inferior in VR MBBT, indicating potential for cross-platform scalability. We found no evidence that intention to use was higher for VR, suggesting that practical considerations such as accessibility and cost may outweigh technology-based preferences. Although these findings are promising, future research must assess their applicability in the real world and ensure accessibility to VR for equitable use.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Lola Jo Ackermann
Helen Galliker
University of Zurich
Yanick Xavier Lukic
University of St.Gallen
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Ackermann et al. (Mon,) conducted a other in Acute stress (n=67). VR mobile biofeedback breathing training vs. Smartphone mobile biofeedback breathing training was evaluated on Perceived (relaxation) effectiveness, intention to use, and perceived breathing detection accuracy. VR mobile biofeedback breathing training was not perceived as more effective than smartphone training for relaxation or intention to use, but breathing detection accuracy was perceived as non-inferior.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69fd7f65bfa21ec5bbf07e84 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5167/uzh-434006