Background/Objectives: Single-case studies represent a sophisticated and rigorous methodological framework, widely established in clinical research for providing high-resolution data on individual functional responses. This study evaluates the clinical utility of integrating immersive Virtual Reality (VR) gaming as a novel “functional ingredient” within the Video Game Therapy (VGT) protocol. Given the exploratory single-case nature of this intervention, clinical state-modulations cannot be rigorously validated using standard aggregated group statistics. Therefore, the core objective of this paper is to investigate the therapeutic potential of the VR session on psychological state-modulation, introducing the Single-Case Normative Analytics (SCNA) framework as the mandatory statistical vehicle required to validate individual longitudinal shifts against normative data. Methods: The study treats individual VR exposures as independent, short-term clinical probes embedded within a real-world clinical journey. The SCNA framework was deployed by integrating Crawford’s modified t-tests with longitudinal percentile tracking against an empirical normative reference group (n = 20). Acute state-anxiety variations (STAI-Y1), psychological well-being (PGWBI), and flow dynamics were tracked across three distinct sessions to monitor the patient’s relative repositioning within the normative distribution. Results: The inferential analysis indicates that the immersive 20-min environment facilitated reliable, statistically significant changes in acute state anxiety and flow dimensions, systematically exceeding standard measurement error boundaries and successfully moving the patient’s psychometric profile toward healthy normative ranges. Conclusions: While these findings focus on individual, idiographic reactivity, they demonstrate the utility of the SCNA framework in providing clinicians with objective, evidence-based feedback on the clinical viability of specific VR-based functional units. This approach allows for a rigorous evaluation of standalone digital tools independently of a full, holistic VGT protocol, offering a structured alternative to traditional designs focused on identifying general patterns across groups.

Sarini, M., Bocci, F. (2026). A Normative Analytics Approach to Functional Component Assessment: Identifying VR Efficacy Within the Video Game Therapy® Methodology, 1(1) [10.3390/dhi1010004].

A Normative Analytics Approach to Functional Component Assessment: Identifying VR Efficacy Within the Video Game Therapy® Methodology

Sarini, Marcello;
2026

Abstract

Background/Objectives: Single-case studies represent a sophisticated and rigorous methodological framework, widely established in clinical research for providing high-resolution data on individual functional responses. This study evaluates the clinical utility of integrating immersive Virtual Reality (VR) gaming as a novel “functional ingredient” within the Video Game Therapy (VGT) protocol. Given the exploratory single-case nature of this intervention, clinical state-modulations cannot be rigorously validated using standard aggregated group statistics. Therefore, the core objective of this paper is to investigate the therapeutic potential of the VR session on psychological state-modulation, introducing the Single-Case Normative Analytics (SCNA) framework as the mandatory statistical vehicle required to validate individual longitudinal shifts against normative data. Methods: The study treats individual VR exposures as independent, short-term clinical probes embedded within a real-world clinical journey. The SCNA framework was deployed by integrating Crawford’s modified t-tests with longitudinal percentile tracking against an empirical normative reference group (n = 20). Acute state-anxiety variations (STAI-Y1), psychological well-being (PGWBI), and flow dynamics were tracked across three distinct sessions to monitor the patient’s relative repositioning within the normative distribution. Results: The inferential analysis indicates that the immersive 20-min environment facilitated reliable, statistically significant changes in acute state anxiety and flow dimensions, systematically exceeding standard measurement error boundaries and successfully moving the patient’s psychometric profile toward healthy normative ranges. Conclusions: While these findings focus on individual, idiographic reactivity, they demonstrate the utility of the SCNA framework in providing clinicians with objective, evidence-based feedback on the clinical viability of specific VR-based functional units. This approach allows for a rigorous evaluation of standalone digital tools independently of a full, holistic VGT protocol, offering a structured alternative to traditional designs focused on identifying general patterns across groups.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
therapeutic gaming; virtual reality; single case; normative analytics
English
16-giu-2026
2026
1
1
4
open
Sarini, M., Bocci, F. (2026). A Normative Analytics Approach to Functional Component Assessment: Identifying VR Efficacy Within the Video Game Therapy® Methodology, 1(1) [10.3390/dhi1010004].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/611981
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