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Virtual reality may predict behaviour of sex offenders

Technology can be used to better gauge reactions of sex offenders and assess their therapeutic progress.

Virtual reality may predict behaviour of sex offenders

Virtual reality can help predict both the behaviour of sex offenders and the effectiveness of the therapies they have undergone, according to a new study.

Massil Benbouriche of the University of Montreal’s School of Criminology found that the technology can be used to better gauge the reactions of sex offenders and assess their therapeutic progress.

“It is currently impossible to define the circumstances in which patients will – or will not – contain their aggressive impulses following therapy or treatment or prevent themselves reoffending,” said Benbouriche.

“By testing research protocols that can be applied using virtual reality, we are able to help empirically validate theories that could explain why offenders act on their impulses,” Benbouriche said.

Since 2006 the Philippe-Pinel Institute, where Benbouriche coordinates the virtual reality lab, has used virtual reality in forensic psychiatry to assess the profile of sexual offenders and the risks they pose.

Penile plethysmography had been the only way to determine the sexual preferences of sexual offenders. It involves placing a ring around a man’s penis to measure changes in circumference caused by visual or auditory stimuli presented to the individual. But the method is not without flaws.

“The person can have control and blur the results by, among other things, not looking at the images,” Benbouriche said.

However, a protocol was recently developed combining the penile ring with a visual scanning test using stimuli presented by computer to measure the period of gaze on the erogenous zones presented in the images and the period of gaze alteration between these zones.

It allows determining with greater precision certain behaviours associated with deviant sexual preference.

“Now, by combining these methods with virtual reality, we are able to submit individuals to an immersive experience by placing them in a vault, that is, a cube with four to six large screens on which stimuli are projected,” Benbouriche said.

The virtual reality tests have been conducted to compare results obtained in patients with sexual deviations with those from non-delinquent individuals.

“The results show that using virtual stimuli give similar results to what other methods have yielded in terms of assessing whether or not an individual presents deviant responses,” Benbouriche said.

“Our data are conclusive, and we know that virtual reality has been effective in treating various anxiety disorders and phobias and is promising in treating schizophrenia.

“Virtual reality may become a frequently-used clinical tool in forensic psychiatry within the next few years, both for judging how dangerous individuals are and for determining their ability to control themselves under various situations tested in virtual reality, thus allowing us to measure the effectiveness of therapies,” Benbouriche said.

 

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First published on: 03-11-2014 at 14:01 IST
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