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Motivation clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT03431324 Not yet recruiting - Smoking Cessation Clinical Trials

Mating-EFT Smoking Cessation Intervention

Start date: January 1, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The current proposal aims to develop and establish the effectiveness of a novel behavioral smoking cessation intervention. Previous research has shown that having smokers engage in episodic future thinking (EFT) about specific positive life outcomes that they could experience if they quit smoking immediately can be an effective means of reducing cigarette consumption. This intervention allowed participants to generate their own general positive life outcomes. While the existing intervention approaches motivation from a generalist perspective, the current proposal seeks to modify this intervention to fit within a Fundamental Social Motives (FSM) framework. The FSM framework posits that there exist individual differences in fundamental social motives such as self-protection, disease avoidance, affiliation, kin care, and mating motives such that some individuals are more motivated to work toward some of these goals than others. Specifically, the current proposal seeks to develop an EFT intervention that appeals to fundamental mating motives by asking participants to imagine positive mating outcomes that they might experience in one year's time if they were to quit smoking immediately. This will be accomplished via two empirical studies. Study 1 will compare the effectiveness of the mating-EFT intervention to the general-EFT intervention and a yoked control condition while examining the possibility that individual differences in relationship status, mating motives, self-efficacy, and nicotine dependence moderate these effects. Study 2 will employ a quasi-experimental design to test the effectiveness of this intervention using a tailored messaging approach, assigning smokers who are either single and motivated to seek new mates or involved in a committed relationship and not motivated to seek new mates to complete the general or mating-EFT or a control task. The investigators predict that the mating-EFT will be more effective than the general EFT in reducing cigarette consumption, particularly if it is administered to participants who have more active mating goals.

NCT ID: NCT03190681 Not yet recruiting - Motivation Clinical Trials

Motivation and Methylphenidate

MBB_MPH
Start date: July 1, 2017
Phase: Early Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the impact of methylphenidate, a mixed dopaminergic and noradrenergic agent, onto the different components of motivation: decision-making, effort allocation and instrumental learning.