4 research outputs found

    Autonomie territoriali e forme di differenziazione. Ordinamenti a confronto.

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    I contributi raccolti all’interno del fascicolo costituiscono una rielaborazione degli interventi che si sono tenuti in occasione della Giornata di Studi di diritto comparato sul tema «Autonomie territoriali e forme di differenziazione. Ordinamenti a confronto». L’incontro – dedicato, come d’altronde questo stesso Quaderno, alla memoria del compianto prof. Paolo Carrozza, ad un anno dalla sua scomparsa – è stato organizzato dall’Associazione di studi sul diritto e la giustizia costituzionale «Gruppo di Pisa» e si è svolto, sotto forma di “seminario virtuale” (o webinar), il 12 giugno 2020, presso l’Università degli Studi di Milano

    Virtual Reality as a Tool for Cognitive Behavioural Therapy: A Review.

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    This chapter describes the deployment of Virtual Reality (VR) for Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) to treat anxiety and other psychological disorders. Regarding anxiety, the most common technique is constituted of Exposure Therapy that, transposed to Virtual Reality, allows the patient to face a digital version of the feared object or situation, instead of a real or imaginal one. Virtual Reality Exposure Therapy (VRET) has proved effective in the treatment of anxiety disorders such as social phobia, Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), and panic disorder with agoraphobia and has shown an efficacy comparable to traditional in-vivo exposure with various specific phobias such as arachnophobia, acrophobia, and fear of flying. Thanks to its versatility, VR has also found an employment within the CBT framework with other psychological disorders, such as substance abuse, eating disorders, and in inducing non-pharmacological analgesia in patients undergoing painful medical procedures. Even when VR-based therapy does not lead to better results than traditional CBT in terms of efficacy, there are several reasons for preferring it over in-vivo exposure, including patient\u2019s comfort and safety, as well as the possibility to create complex or delicate scenarios (e.g. PTSD scenarios). In addition, VRET can be employed to facilitate the transition toward fearful objects in the real world in patients who would otherwise refuse to face real stimuli
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