Clinical Trials Logo

Social Facilitation clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Social Facilitation.

Filter by:
  • None
  • Page 1

NCT ID: NCT06375551 Not yet recruiting - Mental Health Clinical Trials

K-ORCA: Testing a Decision Support Tool and Group Process for Selecting Interventions

K-ORCA
Start date: July 31, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This proposal responds to NIMH Objective 4.2.c to develop "decision-support tools and technologies that increase the effectiveness and continuous improvement of mental health interventions" by leveraging the Family First Prevention Services Act (FFPSA) policy opportunity. First, a web-based platform to host (a) a decision-support tool and (b) automated facilitation for group decisions with the tool will be developed with state partners' feedback. Next, decision makers leading their states' FFPSA quality improvement efforts will be engaged to pilot a decision-support intervention comprised of the tool and live or automated facilitation, and to evaluate the implementation quality of evidence-based programs adopted with the decision-support intervention.

NCT ID: NCT03929289 Completed - Social Facilitation Clinical Trials

The Visuo-attentional Mediator of Social Facilitation

VAMOS
Start date: April 16, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Social psychology has long established that the mere presence of others influences the investigator's individual behavior and performance. "Social facilitation" refers to any improvement or deterioration of performance due to the presence of others. For more than a century, social psychology has acquired a solid knowledge of the principles governing this fundamental form of social influence. But the underlying mechanism of social facilitation remains debated, as behavior alone cannot identify it with certainty. This major unresolved problem makes it particularly difficult to translate laboratory results on social facilitation into real applications in areas such as school or work, where others are ubiquitous. The purpose of this study will therefore be to identify the mediator of social facilitation.