Cognitive Function Clinical Trial
Official title:
Promoting Mental Acuity in Elderly Populations Through Incentive for Technology Use
In this between-subject randomized controlled trial the investigators will test the impact of three novel structured financial incentives: atomistic, altruistic and team-based. These incentive schemes will be used to motivate one month of daily use of software designed to improve cognitive function (including memory, reaction times, attention and executive function) among the elderly. The 400 participants will be members of retirement communities in Pennsylvania. Three outcomes will be monitored and analyzed: activities completed using the software (primary), performance on the activities, and changes in cognitive functioning. This study is designed to be a pilot study. The investigators will have 90% power to find a mean daily difference of 4 activities completed in the control group versus 7 activities completed in the incentive groups assuming a standard deviation of 3.5 and an alpha of 0.017 (the bonferroni corrected significance level to account for multiple comparisons). In addition during a three month "follow-up period" all participants will have continued access to the software, however, no incentives will be provided for use. This period will be used to assess the impact of the initial incentives on long run use after financial incentives have ceased.
The proposed study, a 4-arm randomized control trial, tests three novel incentive systems
intended to promote the daily use of computer programs designed to improve memory and mental
acuity among residents of retirement communities. Three outcome measures will be used to
assess the effectiveness of the incentive programs: number of activities completed using the
software (primary outcome of interest), performance on the activities, and differences
between pre and post measures of mental acuity (using a standardized test of mental
functions). Incentives to use the software will be offered to individuals in the
experimental conditions for the first month of the 4 month study. After the initial month of
incentives, all individuals will have continued access to the software, however, no
incentives will be provided for use.
Incentives: Three incentive structures will be tested against one control group:
1. Control: Access to software programs, but no rewards for use.
2. Atomistic: Each individual is rewarded for his or her individual participation
3. Altruistic: Participants will be paired with an individual at a different retirement
community and will be rewarded according to the other individual's participation
4. Combination cooperative/competitive: Individuals will be paired in teams which will
compete against each other. Each team will be rewarded according to relative
participation, but members within a team will receive the same amount.
Pairs will be matched on gender, age, and education, and then pairs will be randomly
assigned to the different incentive conditions. Rewards in all incentive conditions will
range to a maximum of $5 per day, and will be awarded differently depending on the incentive
condition. Although participants will be informed of their winnings each day (to give
frequent positive reinforcement), they will be paid cumulated amounts once a month (to
reduce transactions costs and to ensure that actual payments are substantial). The number of
activities completed using the software (up to 10 daily, or approximately 30 minutes of use)
will be the basis for daily incentive payments to reward effort and avoid discouraging those
who are not highly skilled. Cognitive testing will be done with the NueroTrax Mindstreams
cognitive testing software.
Subjects: Roughly 400 participants will be recruited from local retirement communities which
offer computing services to their residents. Subjects will be between the ages of 55 and 85
and will be required to sign informed consent forms before they are admitted to the study.
Due to our focus on a population facing cognitive declines, extra care will be taken to
ensure that all participants understand the information provided in the informed consent
document. We will not enroll potential participants who are not able to verbalize
understanding of the contents of the consent form. Participants will be trained in basic
computer use and operation of the software using the Carnegie Mellon University mobile
research van (see http://www.cmu.edu/news/archive/2007/June/june20_datatruck.shtml).
This pilot study will serve as the basis for a larger-scale study of financial incentives
for elderly individuals to engage in mentally challenging tasks that help them improve
cognitive function. In addition, this research will help us determine the relative
effectiveness of different types of incentive designs that could be used in further studies
of the use of financial incentives to encourage the elderly to engage in a variety of other
healthy behaviors.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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