Article Synopsis

  • Individuals with communication disorders often have difficulty applying therapy skills in real life, and immersive virtual reality (VR) may provide effective practice environments.
  • This research investigates the acceptance and usability of a VR application called SIM:Kitchen, specifically looking at the perspectives of individuals aged 46-81 who have acquired communication disorders.
  • Findings revealed that participants found the VR experience enjoyable and realistic, highlighting both the benefits and challenges of using this technology in communication rehabilitation.

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Article Abstract

Background: Individuals who have acquired communication disorders often struggle to transfer the skills they learn during therapy sessions to real-life situations. Immersive virtual reality (VR) technology has the potential to create realistic communication environments that can be used both in clinical settings and for practice at home by individuals with communication disorders.

Objective: This research aims to enhance our understanding of the acceptance, usefulness, and usability of a VR application (SIM:Kitchen), designed for communication rehabilitation. Additionally, this research aims to identify the perceived barriers and benefits of using VR technology from the perspective of individuals with acquired communication disorders.

Methods: Semistructured interviews and usability surveys were conducted with 10 individuals with acquired neurogenic communication disorders aged 46-81 (mean 58, SD 9.57) years after trialing an immersive VR application. The audio-recorded interviews were transcribed and analyzed to identify themes.

Results: The quantitative data regarding the usability of the system associated with participants' immersion experience in the VR application were promising. Findings from semistructured interviews are discussed across five key thematic areas including (1) participant's attitude toward VR, (2) perceived usefulness of the VR system, (3) perceived ease of use of the VR system, (4) their willingness to continue using VR, and (5) the factors they perceived as challenges or facilitators to adopting this VR technology.

Conclusions: Overall, participants in this study found the VR experience to be enjoyable and were impressed by the realism of the VR application designed for communication rehabilitation. This study highlighted personally relevant, immersive VR interventions with different levels of task difficulty that could enhance technology uptake in the context of communication rehabilitation. However, it is essential that VR hand controller technology is refined to be more naturalistic in movement and able to accommodate user capabilities.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10646677PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/46959DOI Listing

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