View clinical trials related to Cognitive Control.
Filter by:Cognitive control (CC) is an important prerequisite for goal-directed behaviour and often associated with dysfunctional prefrontal activity within the cortex. This can be ameliorated by non-invasive brain stimulation. In this randomised single-blind study we compare effects of transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) on CC in healthy subjects. The study includes 162 subjects who undergo a two-week (six sessions) training of cognitive control (adaptive paced auditory serial addition task, PASAT) supported by tDCS. Subjects are randomised to receive either concurrent anodal, cathodal, or sham tDCS with an intensity of 1 mA or 2 mA of their left (F3) or right (F4) PFC, resulting in eight stimulation groups. Stimulation effects on performance changes are compared to a sham control group.Changes in Affective state are measured by the positive and negative affect schedule (PANAS), possible transfer effects are assessed by the Eriksen Flanker task. Stability of effects is measured up to three months after the last intervention.
This is a study to determine whether particular forms of brain-stimulation, applied to superior frontal cortex/preSMA can affect cognition and associated frontal theta oscillations. To perform this study, the investigators first measure brain activity and cognitive performance using "BrainE", a cognitive task platform that assesses cognition on sustained attention, response inhibition, working memory, interference processing and emotion processing assessments. Next, the investigators apply brain-stimulation over a mid-frontal region associated with these tasks (mid-line frontal activity overlying superior frontal cortex/pre-SMA area). Finally, human subjects perform the "BrainE" task assessments again immediately after the brain-stimulation. The investigators compare the effects of brain stimulation on average frontal activity evoked across the cognitive tasks, and on the cognitive performance averaged across tasks. The investigators primarily compare the effects of two types of brain-stimulation against each other: intermittent Theta-Burst Stimulation (a protocol designed to excite brain activity) and continuous Theta-Burst-Stimulation (a stimulation protocol designed to inhibit brain activity).
The study is aimed at comparing the differential effects of two widely used standardized meditation programs: Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) and Compassion Cultivation Training (CCT) in general population samples. To address this goal, the effects will be measured by self-report questionnaires belonging to different domains (mindfulness, compassion, well-being, psychological distress, and psychological functioning) as well as information processing measures (i.e., Attentional Blink), and psychophysiological measures (EEG and EKG). Changes will be assessed immediately after finishing the 8-week programs and through several inter-session assessments. Data analysis will include the mean change scores differences, as well as novel network analysis procedures to assess topological reorganization of constructs derived from the programs.
Investigation of frequency specific transcranial alternating current stimulation on cognitive control signals in frontal cortex