10/23/2023 | University of Stuttgart | News

Using personalized therapy to treat obsessive compulsive disorders

Obsessive compulsive disorders are usually treated in a clinic, but to improve treatment success, researchers from the universities of Tübingen and Stuttgart, under the leadership of the Universitätsklinikum Tübingen (UKT), are now aiming to treat children and adolescents in their everyday environment. To this end, they are developing technically supported therapy options.

Washing our hands, checking that the refrigerator is closed and the stove is turned off, or folding laundry and putting it in the closet are all everyday activities that we do without thinking about them. But if we start to do these tasks repeatedly according to certain rituals until we get them just right, and if unpleasant thoughts arise, these could be signs of an obsessive-compulsive disorder. About three percent of children and adolescents between the ages of 13 and 17 exhibit such compulsive behaviors. Due to these disorders, they and their families often experience significant disruption to their daily lives.

Associating stressors with compulsive behavior sequences

In a further SSTeP-KiZ study on electronic assistance systems, the researchers want to discover how patients continue to improve in everyday life. "We want to investigate how stress perception and behavior change when the children and adolescents are able to practice resisting the performance of compulsive behaviors in everyday life without the therapist," says Prof. Andreas Bulling, an expert in human-computer interaction and cognitive systems at the University of Stuttgart's Institute for Visualization and Interactive Systems (VIS). "Previous studies have shown a clear correlation between biomarkers of stress and purposeful and hesitant movements, or resting and frantic pupil movements. That's why, when it comes to data analysis, we can and must pay more attention to both of these aspects in order to develop adaptive assistance systems."

Expert Contact:

Prof. Tobias Renner, Medical Director of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Universitätsklinikum Tübingen, Phone: +49 7071 29 62510, Email

Dr. Winfried Ilg, University of Tübingen, Section for Computational Sensomotorics, Phone: + 49 7071 29 89125, Email

Prof. Andreas Bulling, University of Stuttgart, Institute for Visualization and Interactive Systems, Phone: +49 711 685 60048, Email

University Communications

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Jacqueline Gehrke

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Source:
https://www.uni-stuttgart.de/en/university/news/all/Using-personalized-therapy-to-treat-obsessive-compulsive-disorders/