Hi CBTInstitute,
You can certainly use Alive to measure skin conductance and heart rate. Just turn the screen towards you instead of the client.
Alive saves SCL, heart rate, and other measurements in a variety of files, named by the date and time of the session. These are in your Documents/Alive Sessions/[USER NAME] folder. Read the following post for more info about this:
http://www.somaticvision.com/phpbb3/vie ... ed6ac9b3cf
Alive will save all of the data, and you can add markers as you train to mark training events, such as when you had the subject start or end a certain task. Changes between between marked segments are automatically analyzed by Alive's session review (in Alive Clinical). So you could see average heart rate per segment, for example.
In a treatment for anxiety type study, you could, for example, do a pre and post treatment assessment of the anxiety. Doing something to elicit the anxiety and watching the SCL or HRV changes as a result, and seeing if they are different post treatment. I am not a researcher, so you'll need to decide how to use the data that Alive records. I would also suggest, in addition to SCL and HRV, measuring average heart rate, which should clearly show anxiety if the anxiety is severe.
I asked Yuval Oded, who does do research with Alive, if he had anything to add. Also, Here are his suggestions:
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Being a relatively new software, so far Alive has been only used in a few research studies - none published yet except this one:
A randomized controlled trial of a self-guided, multimedia, stress management and resilience training program
Raphael D. Rose, Jay C. Buckey Jr.b, Tomislav D. Zbozineka, Sarosh J. Motivalac, Daniel E. Glenna, James A. Cartreined, Michelle G. Craskea, published in Behaviour Research and Therapy Volume 51, Issue 2, February 2013, Pages 106–112.
More studies are being conducted currently.
All studies are using Alive to collect physiological data and have not used Alive games as variables. Data is easy to extract from Alive but choosing the variables to be measured depends on the methodology of your research.If the efficacy of an intervention is examined there are several physiological outcomes that can be chosen such as:
Average heart rate, change in heart rate during a stressful task or after an emotion has been elicited by a movie (to choose the right stimuli please check - Emotion Regulation by Gross et al. Other possible measurements: delta of scl, baseline hrv (measuring at lest six minutes of hrv- see link)
I would suggest reading recent research using physiological outcomes to choose the appropriate variables for you such as this one:
Acoustic startle response in panic disorder.Psychiatry Res. 2010 Apr 30;176(2-3):2
You may want to look at the hand book of psychophysiology (free in the internet) to further explore possible variables and how to use them in research and how to establish baselines:
https://www.hse.ru/data/2011/06/29/1216 ... iology.pdf
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Good luck with your research!
If you need more clinicians to contact you could try Nick Chesher at Alliant University who has finished (but I think not yet published) a study on using Alive's Half Life 2 mod.
Best,
Ryan Deluz
Somatic Vision Inc.