Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Time is an important function that permeates our everyday activities but it has been so far significantly under-investigated in neurological patients. For instance, it is known that right brain damaged (RBD) patients with spatial attentional deficit (neglect) are impaired in both the ability to estimate the duration of an event (Time Estimation), showing a time underestimation, and the ability of mentally moving in past and future time (Mental Time Travelling), showing a deficit in processing future events when they are projected in the past. After a leftward shift of spatial attention induced by prismatic adaptation (PA), both the underestimation and the ability to travel in time ameliorate. However, less is known about these abilities in left brain damaged (LBD) patients. Aims of this study are to investigate: i) the performance (in terms of accuracy and reaction times) of LBD and RBD patients on Mental Time Travelling; ii) the correlation between Mental Time Travelling and Time Estimation abilities; iii) the efficacy of a single session of PA inducing a leftward (L-PA) and a rightward (R-PA) attentional shift on Mental Time Travelling and Time Estimation abilities. A group of control subjects will be involved for comparison among groups.


Clinical Trial Description

Time processing involves different abilities - i.e. estimating the duration of an event (Time Estimation) and moving in past and future time (Mental Time Travelling) - and it is a fundamental ability in everyday life. However, in neuropsychology, time processing is routinely neglected in the assessment of cognitive deficits in brain-damaged patients. This is surprising since time is an important function that permeates our activities: it is involved in perceiving mismatches in lip reading (milliseconds), estimating how long it takes to be ready for work (minutes), and planning how long it will take a manuscript to be accepted (usually months). Thus, impairment in processing time has important consequences in daily life. For instance, it is known that right brain damaged (RBD) patients with spatial attentional deficit (neglect) underestimate durations of milliseconds and show a deficit in processing future events when they are projected in the past. Moreover, previous studies have demonstrated that a leftward shift of spatial attention induced by prismatic adaptation (PA) determines an amelioration of both, time underestimation and the deficit in mental travel in time. The Mental Time Travelling, in particular, seems to involve different cognitive functions, among others, episodic memory and the ability to anticipate the future. Recent evidence suggests that these functions are mediated by neural circuits localized in the left hemisphere but no studies have investigated the ability of mentally moving in past and future time in left brain damaged (LBD) patients. Aims of this study are to investigate: i) the performance (in terms of accuracy and reaction times) of LBD and RBD patients on Mental Time Travelling; ii) the correlation between Mental Time Travelling and Time Estimation abilities; iii) the efficacy of a single session of PA inducing a leftward (L-PA) and a rightward (R-PA) attentional shift on Mental Time Travelling and Time Estimation abilities. A group of control subjects will be involved for comparison among groups. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04424199
Study type Observational
Source Istituti Clinici Scientifici Maugeri SpA
Contact
Status Completed
Phase
Start date February 1, 2019
Completion date January 13, 2023

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT02684825 - Detection of Silent Atrial Fibrillation aFter Ischemic StrOke N/A
Recruiting NCT06170073 - Hong Kong Cohort of Abnormal Sleep in Ageing Population (HK-ASAP): Focusing on Brain Health and Sleep Quality
Recruiting NCT02435810 - Inflammatory and Infectious Diseases of the Nervous System
Not yet recruiting NCT06303869 - Deep Brain Stimulation Motor Ventral Thalamus (VOP/VIM) for Restoration of Speech and Upper-limb Function in People With Subcortical Stroke N/A
Recruiting NCT05812755 - SGC Stimulation, Perioperative Vascular Reactivity, and Organ Injury in Cardiac Surgery Phase 4
Completed NCT00001284 - Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) of Neuropsychiatric Patients and Healthy Volunteers
Terminated NCT01322555 - A Study of the Association Between Autism and Immune Changes in the Brain
Recruiting NCT00862173 - Gene-expression Profiles in CNS-metastatic Non-small Cell Lung Cancer N/A
Recruiting NCT00009243 - Natural History of Stroke: Cause and Development
Recruiting NCT04286516 - Brain Connections for Arm Movement After Stroke N/A
Completed NCT00001927 - Study of Abnormal Blood Clotting in Children With Stroke N/A
Recruiting NCT04489992 - Experiment on the Use of Innovative Computer Vision Technologies for Analysis of Medical Images in the Moscow Healthcare System
Active, not recruiting NCT02070380 - Crossover Comparison of MultiHance and Dotarem Phase 4
Recruiting NCT06301776 - A Prospective, Experimental, Multicenter, Open-label, Randomized, Controlled Trial of 3-month Dual Antiplatelet Therapy Followed by Ticagrelor Versus 6-month Dual Antiplatelet Therapy Followed by Ticagrelor After Implanting Bridge N/A
Completed NCT04970355 - Efficacy of Erenumab in Chronic Cluster Headache Phase 2
Not yet recruiting NCT04383808 - Clinical Translation of a Novel Brain PET Insert for Simultaneous PET/MR N/A
Completed NCT01613417 - Comparison of Prohance® With Gadovist®/Gadavistâ„¢ in Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) of the Brain Phase 4
Completed NCT02211820 - PET Imaging in Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy