The Subjective Response of People Living with HIV to Illness Narratives in VR

This dissertation reports on the results on an exploratory investigation into the potential efficacy of VR as both a support mechanism to people living with HIV/AIDS, as well its capabilities as an emotive medium. Two hypothesis were presented viz. (1) VR will be a form of social support and (2) VR...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hamza, Sabeeha
Format: Others
Published: 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pubs.cs.uct.ac.za/archive/00000392/
id ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uctcs-oai-techreports.cs.uct.ac.za-392
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uctcs-oai-techreports.cs.uct.ac.za-3922014-02-08T03:46:11Z The Subjective Response of People Living with HIV to Illness Narratives in VR Hamza, Sabeeha J.4 SOCIAL AND BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES I.3 COMPUTER GRAPHICS K.4 COMPUTERS AND SOCIETY This dissertation reports on the results on an exploratory investigation into the potential efficacy of VR as both a support mechanism to people living with HIV/AIDS, as well its capabilities as an emotive medium. Two hypothesis were presented viz. (1) VR will be a form of social support and (2) VR will have an emotional impact on participants. The research builds up on findings which demonstrate the therapeutic effectiveness of telling personal and collective narratives in an HIV/AIDS support group. This fact, together with the tested ability of VR as a therapeutic medium, let to the development of a virtual support group with an aim to test its therapeutic efficacy. A low cost, deployable desktop PC based system using custom software was developed. The system implemented a VR walkthrough experience of a tranquil campfire in a forest. The scene contained four interactive avatars who related narratives compiled from HIV/AIDS patients. These narratives covered the aspects of receiving an HIV+ diagnosis, intervention, and coping with living with HIV+ status. To evaluate the system, seven computer semi-literate HIV+ volunteers from townships around Cape Town used the system under the supervision of a clinical psychologist. The participants were interviewed about their experiences with their system, and the data was analyzed qualitatively using grounded theory. The group experiment showed extensive qualitative support for the potential efficacy of the VR system as both a support mechanism and an emotive medium. The comments received by the participants suggested that the VR medium would be effective as a source of social support, and could augment real counselling sessions, rather than replace them. The categories which emerged from the analysis of the interview data were emotional impact, emotional support, informational support, technology considerations, comparison with other forms of support, timing considerations and emotional presence. The categories can be grouped according to the research questions viz. + The efficacy of VR as an emotive medium (Presence, Emotional Impact, Computer Considerations) + The efficacy of the VR simulation as a source of social support (Emotional and Informational Support) Other themes not anticipated by the data included the following: Timing considerations and Comparison with other forms of counselling. The interviews suggested that both hypothesis 1 and 2 are correct viz. that the VR system provided a source of social support, and has an emotional impact on the participants. 2005-01-01 Electronic Thesis or Dissertation http://pubs.cs.uct.ac.za/archive/00000392/ pdf http://pubs.cs.uct.ac.za/archive/00000392/01/finalCorrected.pdf
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic J.4 SOCIAL AND BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES
I.3 COMPUTER GRAPHICS
K.4 COMPUTERS AND SOCIETY
spellingShingle J.4 SOCIAL AND BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES
I.3 COMPUTER GRAPHICS
K.4 COMPUTERS AND SOCIETY
Hamza, Sabeeha
The Subjective Response of People Living with HIV to Illness Narratives in VR
description This dissertation reports on the results on an exploratory investigation into the potential efficacy of VR as both a support mechanism to people living with HIV/AIDS, as well its capabilities as an emotive medium. Two hypothesis were presented viz. (1) VR will be a form of social support and (2) VR will have an emotional impact on participants. The research builds up on findings which demonstrate the therapeutic effectiveness of telling personal and collective narratives in an HIV/AIDS support group. This fact, together with the tested ability of VR as a therapeutic medium, let to the development of a virtual support group with an aim to test its therapeutic efficacy. A low cost, deployable desktop PC based system using custom software was developed. The system implemented a VR walkthrough experience of a tranquil campfire in a forest. The scene contained four interactive avatars who related narratives compiled from HIV/AIDS patients. These narratives covered the aspects of receiving an HIV+ diagnosis, intervention, and coping with living with HIV+ status. To evaluate the system, seven computer semi-literate HIV+ volunteers from townships around Cape Town used the system under the supervision of a clinical psychologist. The participants were interviewed about their experiences with their system, and the data was analyzed qualitatively using grounded theory. The group experiment showed extensive qualitative support for the potential efficacy of the VR system as both a support mechanism and an emotive medium. The comments received by the participants suggested that the VR medium would be effective as a source of social support, and could augment real counselling sessions, rather than replace them. The categories which emerged from the analysis of the interview data were emotional impact, emotional support, informational support, technology considerations, comparison with other forms of support, timing considerations and emotional presence. The categories can be grouped according to the research questions viz. + The efficacy of VR as an emotive medium (Presence, Emotional Impact, Computer Considerations) + The efficacy of the VR simulation as a source of social support (Emotional and Informational Support) Other themes not anticipated by the data included the following: Timing considerations and Comparison with other forms of counselling. The interviews suggested that both hypothesis 1 and 2 are correct viz. that the VR system provided a source of social support, and has an emotional impact on the participants.
author Hamza, Sabeeha
author_facet Hamza, Sabeeha
author_sort Hamza, Sabeeha
title The Subjective Response of People Living with HIV to Illness Narratives in VR
title_short The Subjective Response of People Living with HIV to Illness Narratives in VR
title_full The Subjective Response of People Living with HIV to Illness Narratives in VR
title_fullStr The Subjective Response of People Living with HIV to Illness Narratives in VR
title_full_unstemmed The Subjective Response of People Living with HIV to Illness Narratives in VR
title_sort subjective response of people living with hiv to illness narratives in vr
publishDate 2005
url http://pubs.cs.uct.ac.za/archive/00000392/
work_keys_str_mv AT hamzasabeeha thesubjectiveresponseofpeoplelivingwithhivtoillnessnarrativesinvr
AT hamzasabeeha subjectiveresponseofpeoplelivingwithhivtoillnessnarrativesinvr
_version_ 1716633783238656000