A principal standing in the hallway says, 鈥淵ou are one of my favorite students!鈥 In class, a smart girl says, 鈥淵ou are the nicest person in our class!鈥
Many children would smile and eagerly return those compliments, but some with social anxiety may be too terrified to respond.
Researchers at the 麻豆原创鈥檚 Anxiety Disorders Clinic and the Atlanta-based company Virtually Better want to give more children with social anxiety the practice they need to become comfortable in social situations. They have developed a new, one-of-a-kind computer simulation program that enables children to interact with avatars playing the roles of classmates, teachers and a principal.
The simulation, designed for children ages 8 to 12, allows clinicians to play the roles of the avatars while the children sit at a computer in a different room and respond to situations they encounter routinely. The children practice greetings, giving and receiving compliments, being assertive and asking and answering questions.
鈥淭hese kids come in and say, 鈥業 don鈥檛 know how to make a friend,鈥欌 said Deborah Beidel, director of the Anxiety Disorders Clinic and a psychology professor at 麻豆原创. 鈥淲e have to teach them the skills that most people learn from being around other people.鈥
The National Institute of Mental Health, part of the National Institutes of Health, provided a $500,000 grant to fund the development of the software and a 12-week study that will begin this summer.
Beidel and 麻豆原创 doctoral student Nina Wong are looking for 30 children ages 8 to 12 with social anxiety disorders to participate in the free study. Participants will need to come to the 麻豆原创 campus twice weekly. The study also will feature homework that children will do on either a home computer or a laptop that the research team will provide for free during the study.
Parents or guardians who are interested in learning more about the study can call 407-823-4254. The research team will conduct short interviews to determine whether children qualify.
Many children are nervous and slow to warm up in new social situations, but those with social anxiety disorders have severe distress that doesn鈥檛 go away, Beidel said.
鈥淚f a fear is so severe that it prevents a child from doing something he or she should be doing, such as going to school, playing on a sports team, being in a dance recital, going to birthday parties or making friends, then a parent should call a mental health professional,鈥 she said.
Under Beidel鈥檚 leadership, the 麻豆原创 Anxiety Disorders Clinic has treated children with anxiety disorders for five years. The clinic offers what Beidel calls the 鈥済old standard鈥 of treatments. Children with anxiety disorders are paired with socially comfortable peers for outings to places such as bowling alleys, restaurants and miniature golf courses.
The new study will give parents multiple treatment options at 麻豆原创. But parents in most communities aren鈥檛 so fortunate. Many clinicians who treat children don鈥檛 have the time or resources to recruit socially comfortable children and organize regular outings. Guiding clients through a simulation in the office may be the only feasible solution for them.
The simulation features a realistic school setting, designed with the help of elementary school teachers. The pre-programmed responses of the avatar classmates 鈥 which include a cool girl, a smart girl and a bully — were recorded by children to ensure the language reflects how they talk.
鈥淭he most important thing is that this was designed by clinicians with a very specific intention to help people get better. That鈥檚 the big difference between this and a game, and there is nothing like this on the market,鈥 said Josh Spitalnick, clinical psychologist and director of research and clinical services at Virtually Better, an Atlanta-based company bringing interactive technologies to behavioral healthcare for treatment and training.
The six characters and the varying levels of difficulty in the simulation allow clinicians to design scenarios appropriate for their patients. More challenging scenarios include dealing with a bully who is demanding that a child give up some of her lunch money.
If the initial trial goes well, researchers hope to conduct a yearlong trial with more children. If that is successful, the simulation could then become available to clinicians. The program eventually could be expanded to include other settings, such as playgrounds, and to serve other children who need help improving social skills.
For more information about 麻豆原创鈥檚 Anxiety Disorders Clinic, go to https://sciences.ucf.edu/psychology/research/laboratories/labs_anxiety/. For more information about Virtually Better Technologies, visit .