Publications by authors named "Kyung-Hun Han"

The present study aimed to explore the effects of motionless imagery training with an avatar in virtual reality (VR) on emotion, cognition, and physiological response changes in healthy adults. Participants were 30 healthy adults aged between 19 and 35 years. All participants were randomly divided into the experimental group (n = 18), which executed the imagery training with an avatar in VR, or the control group (n = 12), which merely experienced the VR without an avatar.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study evaluated the psychometric properties of the Korean version of the Brief Pain Response Inventory (K-BPRI) in patients with chronic pain.
  • A total of 164 Korean patients participated, where methods included assessing construct validity and various reliability measurements.
  • Results indicated the K-BPRI has a strong two-factor structure, good internal consistency, and reliable test-retest scores, making it a useful tool for assessing psychological flexibility in chronic pain management.
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Background: Healthy aging includes physical, psychological, social, and spiritual well-being in later years. The purpose of this study is to identify the psychosocial factors influencing healthy aging and examining their socio-demographic characteristics. Perceived health status, depression, self-esteem, self-achievement, ego-integrity, participation in leisure activities, and loneliness were identified as influential factors in healthy aging.

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Background: Hypnotic drugs tend to be the dominant form of treatment of insomnia, but these come with a number of reported side effects. Acupuncture has been studied as an alternative, resulting in a rising need for methodological research towards verifying its efficacy as insomnia treatment.

Methods/design: We describe a proposal for a single-center, patient-assessor-blinded, randomized controlled trial with two parallel arms.

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Vocal expression of emotions (EE) in retrieval of events from autobiographical memory was investigated in patients in early stages of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Twenty-one AD patients and 19 controls were interviewed, and EE of the reported memories was rated by 8 independent evaluators. The AD group had lower EE of both recent and remote memory than controls, although EE in remote memories was better preserved in both groups.

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