AI Article Synopsis

  • Excessive self-criticism is a key psychological issue, but self-compassion can help individuals recover and become more resilient, making it a focus for treatment strategies.
  • A study was conducted with 68 undergraduates to test a Virtual Reality (VR) intervention that involved roleplays where participants practiced self-compassion toward a virtual character reflecting their own self-critical thoughts.
  • Results indicated that both roleplay conditions led to increased self-compassion and decreased self-criticism, but the addition of changing perspectives did not provide any extra benefits; simply showing compassion was enough to see improvements.

Article Abstract

Excessive self-criticism is an important transdiagnostic psychological factor. In contrast, self-compassion can contribute to the resilience and recovery of clinical populations, making this an important target for treatment. Virtual Reality (VR) has the potential to improve existing interventions as it allows for personalized roleplays that can be experienced from different perspectives, by using the novel VR technique of perspective change. We investigated the effects of a VR intervention on self-criticism and self-compassion, and the added value of changing perspectives. In total, 68 undergraduate students with high levels of self-criticism were randomized to either the perspective change condition or the control condition. Participants played two roleplays in which they had to react compassionately toward a virtual character that expressed the participants' own self-critical thoughts. In the perspective change condition, after each roleplay perspective change was used to receive one's own compassionate words. Results showed that self-compassion increased and self-criticism decreased significantly in both conditions. No significant differences were found for negative and positive affect. Furthermore, no differences were found between the conditions. Thus, receiving compassionate words through perspective change had no additional effect. Expressing compassion to someone with similar self-criticism showed to be sufficient to reduce self-criticism and increase self-compassion.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.brat.2023.104466DOI Listing

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