Depression Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Role of Memory Consolidation in Negative Memory Biases in Affective Disorders
NCT number | NCT05276583 |
Other study ID # | DMEMxp |
Secondary ID | |
Status | Not yet recruiting |
Phase | |
First received | |
Last updated | |
Start date | May 2022 |
Est. completion date | May 2022 |
When individuals experience depression, they may find that their brain does not work in the same way that they are used to. For example, sometimes the ability to remember things that happened during the day is not so good. This might specifically impact positive memories, for example remembering having fun at the ice cream shop with some friends. This is because when individuals are depressed they sometimes can not remember positive experiences as our brains do not have the chemicals needed to store those memories. In this experiment the investigators want to see if the ability to remember positive information is negatively impacted by depression. To do so, participants will look at some images that are related to winning high vs. low rewards. Next they are tested on their memory for those images. Participants will also be asked some questions about themselves and their mental health. The investigators expect that those who are experiencing depression will be less able to remember images related to higher rewards compared to those who are not experiencing depression.
Status | Not yet recruiting |
Enrollment | 400 |
Est. completion date | May 2022 |
Est. primary completion date | May 2022 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | 20 Years to 45 Years |
Eligibility | Inclusion criteria - Prolific approval rating of at least 95% and have participated in at least 10 studies on Prolific. - Country of residence: United Kingdom - Aged between 20-45 - Education level: At least A-levels or equivalent - Participants must use a computer or laptop to participate. - Participants must not have participated in the study conducted to validate the images used in this experiment and in the experiment from our previous preregistrations. - Participants must not have participated in the previous studies which used the stimuli for this task. Exclusion criteria - Participants who incorrectly answer the practice trials and/or the questions of either the learning or test phases of the Motivated Learning Task. (For every question, they can try twice. Only if they get it wrong twice for a given practice phase/question they are excluded.) - Participants with reaction times below 150ms in more than 20 % of the flanker task and/or the PVT. (These are considered implausibly fast reaction times that indicate that participants did not participate in the task the way it is intended, e.g., random key presses or clicking) - who have 20% or more lapses (reaction times above 1000 ms) on the PVT. - Participants who incorrectly respond on > 50% of the flanker task, indicating they did not pay attention to the task. - Participants with a d' of 0 and below, indicating chance or worse than chance performance. - Participants who do not complete both parts of the experiment. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Germany | Central Institute of Mental Health | Mannheim | BW |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Central Institute of Mental Health, Mannheim | German Research Foundation |
Germany,
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* Note: There are 12 references in all — Click here to view all references
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Becks Depression Inventory BDI | The BDI is a 21-item self-report measure of depression symptoms and will be used to distinguish between groups who are not depressed from those who may suffer from depression. Participants answer with one of four responses per item which is scored from 0 - 3. Scores on the BDI range from 1 - 40 with higher scores being more indicative of severe depression symptoms. Participants who score > 19 will be classified as depressed. | Assessed at the beginning of the experiment once | |
Other | Generalised Anxiety Disorder - 7 GAD | The GAD-7 is a 7-item self-report measure of anxiety, with scores ranging from 0-21, where each item is assigned a score ranging from 0-3. Higher scores are indicative of worse anxiety related symptoms. | Assessed during the first part of the experiment after the BDI. | |
Other | Snaith-Hamilton Pleasure Scale (SHAPS) | The SHAPS is a 14-item self-report scale measuring anhedonia. Participants respond with Definitely Agree, Agree, Disagree, and Strongly Disagree to each item, where disagree responses receive a score of 1 and remaining responses receive a score of 0. Scores range from 0 - 14 with higher scores indicating greater levels of anhedonia. | Assessed during the first part of the experiment after the GAD. | |
Other | Stanford Sleepiness Scale (SSS) | The SSS is a measure of sleepiness that will allow us to rule out whether differences in memory performance between sleep and wake conditions are due to tiredness at learning and test phases. Participants will indicate their sleepiness on a 7-point scale ranging from from 1 = active, vital, alert or wide awake to 7 = no longer fighting sleepiness, about to fall asleep, dream-like thoughts.. | Assessed during the first and second parts of the experiment, that is before the study phase and before the test phase | |
Other | Psychomotor Vigilance Task (PVT) | Differences in vigilance between healthy and patient conditions will be examined using the 5-minute version of the PVT. Participants are required to press the spacebar whenever they see a timer counting upwards. Vigilance will be assessed by comparing reaction times between session 1 and session 2. | Assessed during the first and second parts of the experiment, that is before the study phase and before the test phase | |
Other | Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test, AUDIT | Participants will complete the 10-item self-report version of the AUDIT. In this scale participants indicate their level of alcohol consumption and how often it has impacted their life. | The AUDIT is collected during the first part of the experiment before the BDI | |
Primary | Discriminability, d' | Discriminability refers to the ability of a participant to distinguish between targets, i.e., images that were presented to them, and lures, i.e., images that were not shown to them. This is calculated using the following formula:
z("hit rate" )-z("false alarm rate") and will be calculated for each reward category. |
immediately after the procedure | |
Secondary | Hit Rate | The hit rate refers to the number of hits (i.e., correct "old" responses to target images) divided by the number of target trials. The hit rate will be calculated for every reward category. | immediately after the procedure | |
Secondary | False Alarm Rate | The false alarm rate, the number of false alarms (i.e., incorrect "old" responses to lure images)/the number of lure trials. The false alarm rate will be calculated for every reward category | immediately after the procedure | |
Secondary | Criterion, C | Criterion refers to a participants willingness to say "old" irrespective of whether or not they actually saw the image. Criterion is calculate using the following formula:
(- z("hit rate" )+ z("false alarm rate" )) / 2 and will be calculated for every reward category. |
immediately after the procedure |
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