@article{gemesi2025vitras, abstract = {A negative body image can have an impact on developing and maintaining obesity. Using virtual reality (VR) to conduct cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is an innovative approach to treat people with obesity. This multicenter non-randomized pilot study examined the feasibility and the effect on eating behavior and body perception of a newly developed VR system to conduct body image exercises.}, added-at = {2025-04-27T20:47:09.000+0200}, author = {Gemesi, Kathrin and Döllinger, Nina and Weinberger, Natascha-Alexandra and Wolf, Erik and Mal, David and Keppler, Sebastian and Wenninger, Stephan and Bader, Emily and Wienrich, Carolin and Luck-Sikorski, Claudia and Latoschik, Marc Erich and Israel, Johann Habakuk and Botsch, Mario and Holzapfel, Christina}, biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/27f294544fac3a868bf0b38b48b672c52/ewolf}, doi = {10.1186/s12911-025-02993-x}, interhash = {35791053981b094d6d583821d199aaff}, intrahash = {7f294544fac3a868bf0b38b48b672c52}, journal = {BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making}, keywords = {myown}, number = {1}, pages = {176}, refid = {Gemesi2025}, timestamp = {2025-05-15T12:37:35.000+0200}, title = {Virtual Body Image Exercises for People with Obesity – Results on Eating Behavior and Body Perception of the ViTraS Pilot Study}, url = {https://publications.wolf-research.com/2025-bmc-results-vitras-pilot.pdf}, volume = {25}, year = {2025} }