Executive Dysfunction Clinical Trial
Official title:
Training to Deal With Distractors and With Conflicting/Problem-solving Situations: An Executive/Monitoring Treatment Protocol on Everyday Life Activities
Empirical research shows that deficits in executive/monitoring abilities (inhibition, error detection, problem solving) following acquired brain injury produce serious impact on patient's daily life performance. The authors developed an intervention method aimed at improving "on-line" error detection and correction abilities during performance of naturalistic action. Patients will be asked to complete two significant everyday activities (e.g. making a sandwich and setting the kitchen table for four people) while increasing the level of monitoring requirements as their performance improve. Monitoring requirements increased by presenting new semantically and physically related distractors and increasing the number of conflicting/problem solving situations. The treatment involves a metacognitive contextual intervention program based on providing systematic online/offline-feedback on their own performance, with emphasis on making the patient aware of how to deal with distracting/conflicting situations that were previously failed. The authors predict that errors committed and addressed through the feedback sessions (errors, actions towards distractors, failures to detect/solve conflicting situations) will be reduced on post-intervention performance compared to baseline. The authors also expect behavioral improvements to generalize to trained tasks but adding new distractors/conflicting situations or even to untrained tasks.
This protocol will be applied to several acquired brain damage patients with executive/monitoring deficits. Baseline evaluation will take take around 5 sessions, The training phase will be done on 6 sessions and post-training evaluation will be completed on around 3 sessions. Each patient will be invited to be retested 8/10 weeks after completing the training, to evaluate long term effects (secondary outcome). The final number of participants enrolled in the study will depend on availability. The authors will use a single case A-B changing criterium design: Phase A constitutes the base line. Three ADL tasks will be performed by the participant without help, two of them will be treated on phase B and the other will not be trained. Each task will be evaluated 3/4 times to obtain a robust baseline. Apart from ADL, other executive/monitoring measures will be obtained pre and post-training through neuropsychological screening. The level of monitoring difficulty will be increasing from one training session to the next, from level 1 (2 distractors/1 conflicting situation) to level 3 (8 distractors/4 conflicting situations). Baseline and post-training performance will be evaluated at level 3.The criterion to increase the level of monitoring requirements will be adjusted to each individual depending on his/her performance on the previous level. Therefore, only if a given participant reduces on at least 75% the amount of errors from initial evaluation on the present training session he/she will be confronted with the next level of difficulty on the next session. However, if the patient doesn't reach the criterium, the same level of monitoring will be repeated and trained on the following session. Outcomes measures (post-training phase) will be taken after completing 6 training sessions. ;
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