Virtual Reality technology could become an efficient tool for older people with balance problems or for rehabilitation following injuries or illness that affect balance and movement. In a new study published in Scientific Reports, researchers from Lund University have studied how the human balance system is affected by watching Virtual Reality videos, the Sweden-based public university announced on its website.

Vision changes can entail major problems in everyday life. To a high degree, vision affects our ability to keep our balance, and balance affects our ability to move around.

“People with long-term dizziness sometimes rely a lot on their vision and do not use the very quick and effective balance system provided by sensory information from joints and muscles,” said Eva Ekvall Hansson, researcher and associate professor of physiotherapy at Lund University. “This can intensify feelings of dizziness, which is very unpleasant. The new study shows a possible treatment method for these conditions.”

Twenty healthy women and men took part in the study, in which they watched a Virtual Reality (VR) simulation of a roller coaster ride while standing on a platform which registered their postural stability. The researchers investigated how the participants’ balance system was affected when visual information was disrupted by the experience of being in a VR environment which gave them a strong sensation of being in movement.

The study shows that the human balance system can very quickly cease to rely on vision and use other senses instead, such as sensory information from the feet, joints, and muscles to increase postural stability. Differences also emerged in how men and women are affected by watching a VR video. More women had difficulty maintaining their balance in a VR environment and they generally needed more practice before they learnt to use their other senses to increase postural stability.

“VR can thus be an effective tool in rehabilitation, to train the patient’s ability to rely on senses other than vision to keep their balance,” said Måns Magnusson, professor of otorhinolaryngology research at Lund University and consultant physician at Skåne University Hospital. “However, some women may need additional practice to achieve the same effect as men in the rehabilitation of certain types of injuries related to vision.”

“We know that older people, to a greater extent than young people, use vision to maintain postural stability. The lessons from this study will therefore be an important incentive to introduce new training methods for the older, for example using VR technology to prevent falls,” said Hansson.

Original Paper: Fransson P-A, Patel M, Jensen H, et al. Postural instability in an immersive virtual reality adapts with repetition and includes directional and gender specific effects. Scientific Reports. 2019;9(3168).

Source: Lund University, Scientific Reports

Image/Video: Lund University