Brain Clinical Trial
Official title:
Brain Networks Responsible for Self-Agency: An fMRI Study
This study will examine how people consider their actions to be under their own control or
not. The term to describe this feeling of being in control of one's own actions is called
"agency." The sense of agency becomes impaired in disorders such as schizophrenia, in which
people may feel, for example, as if someone else is controlling their thoughts.
Healthy, right-handed normal volunteers 18 years of age and older may be eligible for this
study. Candidates are screened with a medical history, neurological examination, pregnancy
test for women of childbearing age, and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan. MRI uses a
strong magnetic field and radio waves to obtain images of body organs and tissues. During the
procedure, the subject lies on a table that can slide in and out of the scanner (a metal
cylinder surrounded by a magnetic field) and may be asked to lie still for up to 30 minutes
at a time.
Participants undergo functional MRI (fMRI). This procedure is the same as a regular MRI,
except it is done while the subject performs tasks. This enables researchers to learn about
changes in brain regions involved in those tasks. The fMRI scan for this study takes about 90
minutes.
Before beginning the fMRI procedure, subjects receive training using a Cyber glove device.
This device allows the researchers to measure the subject's finger movements and display them
on a screen for the subject to view. The subjects are asked to make hand movements by slowly
opening and closing the hand while watching the computer displaying an artificial hand.
During the movements, the subjects' level of control is adjusted and they are asked to
describe how much control they think they have over the hand on the screen. When the subjects
become comfortable using the Cyber glove, they enter the MRI scanner to begin the test scan.
For the fMRI, subjects are given visual instruction on when to begin opening and closing
their right hand. They move continuously for a 30-second block and then have a 20-second rest
period. This is repeated, with subjects provided different levels of control over the
displayed hand in each block. The entire test consists of four runs, each run consisting of
12 blocks lasting about 10 minutes. When the fMRI scanning is finished, the brain is scanned
once more using regular MRI.
OBJECTIVE:
The purpose of this study is to identify structural brain regions, using a block design blood
oxygenation level-dependent functional magnetic resonance imaging (BOLD-fMRI), which are
differentially activated based on the sense of self-agency felt by making simple finger
movements. We will compare the activations of healthy volunteers with patients diagnosed with
a functional movement disorder (FMD) who we hypothesize will have an impaired sense of
volition.
STUDY POPULATION:
We intend to use 25 right-hand dominant, adult healthy volunteers for comparison with 50
patients diagnosed with a FMD. We also wish to study an additinal 5 patients witha complete
or near-complete sensory neuropathy.
DESIGN:
The sense of self-agency (SA) will be modulated using a visual task-based stimulus asking
subjects to manipulate the position of an artificial hand projected onto a display in the
magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scanner. Subjects will use their own right hand to make slow
sequential finger movements which will be represented visually with the aid of a Cyberglove.
During a behavioral training phase, subjects will practice using the apparatus. The level of
control will be randomly changed to one of five states: 100% control, 75%, 50%, 25%, or
random/no control. After subjects are comfortable with the apparatus and endorse SA over the
displayed hand, they will undergo fMRI scanning. FMD patients who do not wish to participate
in the fMRI portion of the study may still participate in the behavioral testing portion.
The imaging phase of the experiment will have five sets of 6 minute scanning sessions where
the subject is instructed to slowly open and close sequential fingers of their right hand.
The level of control will be changed pseudo-randomly throughout the scan sessions. A control
contrast consisting of the subject observing a moving hand will also be integrated into the
blocks. An additional control contrast involving the subject moving their hand without visual
feedback will also be included. These contrasts will serve in the analysis phase to help
eliminate hemodynamic activity related to visual-motor feedback. At the completion of fMRI
scanning, a baseline high-resolution MRI T1 scan will be obtained for anatomic localization
and co-registration. At the completion of the imaging portion, subjects will also be asked to
report the percentage of control they subjectively feel over the displayed hand using a final
data set for behavioral testing.
OUTCOME MEASURES:
The primary outcome of this study is the difference in activation of brain structures in
response to a loss of SA between FMD patients, sensory neuropathy patients, and healthy
controls. In particular, we are interested in the presence of any differential activation in
the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, insula, inferior parietal lobes, pre-supplementary motor
association cortex (pre-SMA), and/or the anterior cingulate which may occur as SA is
increased or decreased. A secondary analysis will utilize the individual subject perceptions
of percent control during the behavioral training phase as the regressors for activation
rather than the objective control settings.
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