Open Access
Open access
Fire, volume 8, issue 3, pages 111

Emotional Induction Among Firefighters Using Audiovisual Stimuli: An Experimental Study

Frédéric Antoine-Santoni 1, 2
A. Syssau 3
Claude Devichi 2
Jean-Louis Rossi 2
Thierry Marcelli 2
François-Joseph Chatelon 2
Adil Yakhloufi 3
Pauline-Marie Ortoli 3
Sofiane Meradji 4
Lucile Rossi 2
Jean-Paul Jauffret 5
Stéphane Chatton 5
Dominique Grandjean-Kruslin 2
Show full list: 13 authors
1
 
SIS2B, Centre de Formation des Sapeurs-Pompiers de Corse, 20250 Corte, France
2
 
Fédération de Recherche Environnement et Société, Université de Corse, 20250 Corte, France
3
 
Laboratoire de Psychologie Epsylon UR 4556, Université Montpellier Paul Valéry, 34090 Montpellier, France
4
 
IMATH, EA 2134, Université de Toulon, 83160 Toulon, France
5
 
T3 Company, 20000 Ajaccio, France
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2025-03-14
Journal: Fire
scimago Q1
wos Q1
SJR0.566
CiteScore3.1
Impact factor3
ISSN25716255
Abstract

This study investigates the effectiveness of immersive audiovisual simulations in eliciting emotional responses and replicating the psychological and cognitive demands of high-risk operational environments, particularly in firefighting scenarios. Conducted in two successive phases, the research first employed a pilot study involving 90 participants (45 firefighters and 45 students) who were exposed to a controlled audiovisual simulation. Emotional responses were assessed using the Differential Emotion Scale (DES), the Emotion Regulation Questionnaire (ERQ), and the Perceived Stress Scale (PSS). The second phase involved an immersive room experiment with 36 firefighters, where the same audiovisual stimulus was presented in a fully immersive environment, integrating interactive decision-making tasks to enhance ecological validity. The findings indicate that both methods effectively elicited the targeted emotional responses, including stress, fear, anger, and serenity, with firefighters exhibiting greater emotional regulation and adaptive coping strategies compared to students. The immersive room environment significantly amplified emotional engagement, resulting in stronger emotional responses from the first scene onward. These results underscore the potential of immersive training tools in preparing emergency responders for high-stress situations by strengthening psychological resilience, improving emotional regulation, and optimizing decision-making under pressure. The study contributes to advancing evidence-based training methodologies in emergency response, public safety, and crisis management, emphasizing the importance of integrating immersive technologies into professional training programs.

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