‘Tetris’-based therapy shown to help PTSD sufferers relieve symptoms | “俄罗斯方块”疗法可缓解PTSD - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
FT英语电台

‘Tetris’-based therapy shown to help PTSD sufferers relieve symptoms
“俄罗斯方块”疗法可缓解PTSD

Study found computer game benefited more than two-thirds of health workers traumatised during pandemic
一项新研究显示,基于经典游戏《俄罗斯方块》的新型疗法能有效帮助创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)患者摆脱痛苦回闪记忆。该疗法利用大脑神经可塑性原理,通过游戏环节干扰创伤性画面的反复侵入。

A new therapy that uses the cult computer game Tetris helped rid traumatic stress disorder sufferers of distressing flashbacks, according to the latest research on the potential of digital interventions to disrupt damaging brain activities.

The approach, involving 20-minute sessions rotating Tetris’s variously shaped and coloured blocks, led to the disappearance of symptoms in more than two-thirds of users and required much less clinician time than existing treatments, scientists found.

The method is part of a widening effort to harness the phenomenon of neuroplasticity, or the brain’s capacity to rewire itself, to ease mental health conditions that are resistant to traditional drug and talking therapies.

“Even a single, fleeting intrusive memory of past trauma can exert a powerful impact in daily life by hijacking attention and leaving people at the mercy of unwanted and intrusive emotions,” said Emily Holmes, research leader and a psychology professor at Sweden’s Uppsala University.

“By weakening the intrusive aspect of these sensory memories via this brief visual intervention, people experience fewer trauma images flashing back.”

The researchers tested their novel therapy on a group of 99 healthcare workers who had been exposed to trauma during the Covid-19 pandemic, according to a paper published in The Lancet Psychiatry late on Wednesday. The treatment, known as imagery competing task intervention (ICTI), involved “far more than just playing Tetris” and had been made as “gentle, brief and practical as possible to fit into people’s busy lives”, Holmes said.

Participants first briefly recalled an unwanted flashback they were experiencing. They were then taught how to use the cognitive skill of “mental rotation”, or visualising and moving objects in the mind’s eye.

They used mental rotation to play a slow-speed game of Tetris, which involves manipulating digital geometric blocks to form complete horizontal lines. The scientists compared the results with those from two other groups, one receiving their usual PTSD treatments and the other a therapy that included listening to Mozart’s String Duo No 1 K 423.

After four weeks, the Tetris-based therapy participants were experiencing greatly fewer intrusive memories than both the active control group and the treatment-as-usual cohort. By week 24, 70 per cent of the Tetris-based therapy participants reported no intrusive memories, compared with 20 per cent for the treatment-as-usual group and 13 per cent for the Mozart listeners.

One theory why Tetris may be an effective mental health tool is that it engages the same parts of the brain active during flashbacks. If the organ is preoccupied with playing the computer game, it is less able to focus on the traumatic PTSD imagery. The memory thus becomes more malleable and, over time, more manageable.

“If we can get similarly strong results in bigger trials, this could have an enormous impact,” said Tayla McCloud, research lead for digital mental health at Wellcome, the philanthropic foundation that funded the study. “It’s rare to see something so accessible, scalable and adaptable across contexts. It doesn’t require patients to put their trauma into words and even transcends language barriers.”

The researchers acknowledged limitations in the study. One was the opportunity for participants to self-refer to the therapy featuring Tetris, which could introduce biases in the cohort and the results. The Tetris-based approach would now need to be further tested for longer timescales “in the real world and for diverse groups within the general population”, the scientists said.

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

深度求索计划大规模招聘,加剧中国人工智能人才争夺战

招聘岗位显示,该公司正专注于前沿研究成果的商业化。

世界杯表现抢眼,挪威掀起维京划船仪式热潮

多名议员和王室成员加入走红的划船潮流,挪威男足在自1998年以来首次亮相世界杯之际凭借连胜确保晋级。

点亮世界杯的久旱群岛

小国佛得角先后战平乌拉圭和欧洲冠军西班牙,只需再拿一分即可出线。

我们都需要补水时间吗?

只有通过被强制安排、井然有序却毫无乐趣的休息,我们才能最大限度发挥工作的效益。

“DeepMind帮”如何把AI热潮带到伦敦

英国科技行业一片火热,但它能否超越美国海外前哨的角色?

英伟达金伯莉•鲍威尔:我们正在重塑医生体验

这家芯片制造商负责医疗健康业务的负责人认为,AI能缓解该领域的诸多问题,包括减轻医务人员的工作负担以及应对专业人才短缺。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×