Ataxia, Cerebellar Clinical Trial
Official title:
Neuromodulation Technique for the Rehabilitation of Social Skills in Childhood Ataxia
The present study aims to define a protocol of electrical stimulation of the cerebellum via
transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) combined with a virtual reality protocol to
assist the rehabilitation of social skills in adolescents and young adults with childhood
ataxia.
Taking into account the high neuronal density of the cerebellum, its strong connection with
the cerebral cortex, and its involvement in motor, cognitive and affective processes, as well
its involvement in social prediction abilities, the investigators hypothesized that
excitatory stimulation of the cerebellum might improve social prediction abilities in
adolescents and young adults with childhood ataxia. Moreover, as suggested by previous
studies investigating the effect of tDCS in paediatric population, the investigators expected
that tDCS will be safe and well tolerated. Such a result would encourage the use of
non-invasive brain stimulation in the rehabilitation of social skills in childhood ataxia.
The investigators planned a single centre, randomized stratified, double-blind, sham-
controlled design.
Adolescents and young adults with childhood ataxia will be recruited and randomly assigned to
two different groups: the active-tDCS group and the sham-tDCS group. Each group will undergo
a multi-sessions (8 sessions) intervention during which tDCS will be delivered over the
cerebellum. The stimulation will be paired with a virtual reality VR training. The Virtual
Reality (VR) training will exploit a design based on probabilistic learning of social events
in child-friendly environments. During the training, participants will be asked to conquer
some goal/objects by predicting the behaviour of some competing virtual avatars whose actions
should be probabilistically learned. Based on the same structures, two different
child-friendly scenarios will be created and they will be respectively used in the pre- and
in the post-training evaluation sessions (scenario A) or in association with the tDCS
protocol throughout the 8 sessions of intervention (scenario B).
Participants' abilities of social prediction (primary outcome) will be tested through a
validated computer based Action prediction task assessing participants' abilities in
predicting others' actions based on previous experience. This experimental paradigm comprises
a probabilistic learning (familiarization) phase and a testing phase. In the familiarization
phase participants are asked to observe an actor performing two different types of grasping
actions (such as grasping movement of an apple for eating the apple or for offering the apple
to another partner) in different colour-cued contexts. They are asked to recognise actor's
intention.
Crucially, the probability of co-occurrence between one action and the colour-cued context is
implicitly biased with pre-established probability of association. In the testing phase, the
same videos are presented but their length is dramatically shortened via temporal occlusion
before the action is completed. In this way, since the movement kinematics is ambiguous, an
observer would use the previously learned association with context to predict the fate of the
action, and responses should be biased toward the contextual priors. A control non-social
prediction task with a similar structure will be also used. A standard neuropsychological
assessment (NEPSY-II) before and after the training will allow assessing the generalizability
of the effects to general social perception abilities, in particular Theory of Mind and
affect recognition (Secondary Outcomes). In the post-training and in the follow-up evaluation
session (one month after the end of the intervention) the training acceptability and the
quality of life assessments will be performed.
The protocol will allow testing the efficiency of the combined tDCS+ VR training in:
- enhancing social prediction abilities in childhood ataxia;
- enhancing implicit learning abilities, even in non social contexts;
- improving theory of mind abilities;
- improving patients' quality of life;
- further investigating the safety and tolerability of tDCS.
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