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Social Interaction clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT06344676 Not yet recruiting - Quality of Life Clinical Trials

Study of the Impact of a Social Robot on Unwanted Loneliness in Elderly People Living in Nursing Homes

WITHPEPPER
Start date: April 1, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this clinical trial is to assess the usefulness of social robots reducing unwanted loneliness in persons over 65 living in nursing homes. The main questions it aims to answer are: - Can social robots reduce unwanted loneliness? - Can social robots improve quality of live and well-being? The selected centers are organized in several classes of living units. Living units are independent physical spaces with their own common facilities for the persons living in (usually around 15). Living units of the same class gather persons with similar characteristics. To compare the added value of the robots half of the living units will be allocated to a control group, and the other half to the intervention group. The persons in living units allocated to the control group will receive the same attentions and care which were receiving before the enrollment in the study, whereas the persons allocated to the intervention group will add a social robot to their usual therapies and activities. Namely participants will do three weekly individual cognitive stimulation sessions of 10 minutes each one, two weekly group mobility sessions of 30 minutes, one monthly conversational group about customs and traditions of 60 minutes, one 10 minutes videoconference per month with their relatives. Furthermore, participants will be able to interact freely with the robot to obtain information about the center (for instance, what is for dinner) and its activities. The intervention will last 8 weeks. To assess the effectivity, the investigators will assess both groups, before the intervention, at the end of the intervention and 4 weeks after finishing the intervention.

NCT ID: NCT06270862 Recruiting - Cognitive Change Clinical Trials

A Digital Active Aging Training Program for Older Adults

AAT
Start date: April 8, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The proposed project aims to develop and validate a multi-dimensional digital active aging program integrated with resilience to promote the biopsychosocial functions of older adults aged 60, including Chinese older immigrants in Canada (Study 1) and English-speaking White Canadian older adults (Study 2). The proposed study takes a typical pretest-training-posttest design. Pretest and posttest: a battery of outcome measures on physical, psychological, and social functions will be administered to all participants. Data will also be used to identify sociodemographic risk predictors for outcome variables (i.e., biopsychosocial functions and resilience). Training: the participants will be randomly assigned to three arms to receive 4 weeks of 16 training/practice/control treatment sessions delivered via Zoom. In the "active aging with resilience (AR)" condition, participants will complete physical, cognitive, and social engagement training modules, starting with a 30-min resilience-building module. The traditional "active aging" (AA) training involves the same multi-domain active aging training without the initial resilience-building module. The "workshop training" (WT) control condition involves workshops following the same 4-week schedule on aging-related topics.

NCT ID: NCT06270732 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Mental Health Wellness 1

Efficacy of iMentalize and MISC-SA to Foster Parents' Mentalization and Children Mental Health in General Population.

iMentalize
Start date: February 5, 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

OBJECTIVES: The goal of this parallel randomized controlled trial is to test the efficacy of the iMentalize program and the Mediational Intervention for Sensitizing Caregivers - Self Administered version (MISC-SA) to foster parents' mentalization and children mental health in families from general population. PARTICIPANTS will randomly receive one of the 3 interventions, all based in 30 weekly online non-synchronic sessions extended across 1 year: the iMentalize program (based on parent-child sessions where they see and talk about cartoon shorts), the MISC-SA (self-administered MISC version based on guided video-feedback using recordings of one's own parent-child interactions), and MISC-R (also self-administered but mainly based on readings and cognitive exercises instead of video-feedback), which is used here as Treatment as Usual (TAU, control group) because it is the most similar to most other intellectual and mainly theoretical trainings. COMPARISONS: Researchers will compare all 3 groups among them to see to what extent: - iMentalize program shows efficacy in fostering mentalization compared with MISC-SA and TAU (control group). - iMentalize program shows efficacy in fostering children's mental health compared with TAU (control group). - MISC-SA shows efficacy in fostering parent's mentalization and children mental health compared with TAU (control group).

NCT ID: NCT06135623 Completed - COVID-19 Clinical Trials

Long-Term Impact of COVID-19 Restrictions on Physical Activity and Social Interactions in Young Adults

Start date: June 14, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

There are studies on the impact of quarantine measures taken during the COVID-19 pandemic on individuals' social interactions and physical activities. We think that the adaptation of individuals who have had COVID-19 infection to return to social and physical activities after restrictions may affect participation in these activities. The aim of this study is to investigate the long-term impact of COVID-19 restrictions on physical activity and social interaction in young adults, depending on whether they have had a COVID-19 infection.

NCT ID: NCT05948683 Recruiting - Social Interaction Clinical Trials

Prosocial Effects of MDMA

PEM
Start date: July 21, 2023
Phase: Early Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

In this study, the aim is to test the hypothesis that MDMA produces greater prosocial effects when administered in the presence of a familiar, compared to an unfamiliar, person

NCT ID: NCT05907252 Recruiting - Physical Inactivity Clinical Trials

The Effectiveness of Supervised Group-based Walking Program Among Older Adults

Start date: June 22, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Aim and Objectives: The overall aim is to examine the effectiveness of supervised group-based walking intervention by comparing with non-supervised group-based walking and non-supervised individual-based walking interventions on improving physical, psychological and social outcomes among the older adults in Hong Kong. The outcomes of the research will be used as references for designing an effective walking operation manual for promoting healthy ageing among older adults in the community. Objectives (Phase 1-Intervention): 1. To compare the differences of effects among supervised group-based, 5 non-supervised group-based, and non-supervised individual-based walking intervention programs, and the control group on the primary outcomes, including physical health, walking performance, loneliness, perceived social support and physical activity enjoyment among the older adults in Hong Kong. 2. To compare the differences of effects among supervised group-based, non-supervised group-based, and non-supervised individual-based walking intervention programs, and the control group on the secondary outcomes, including health-related quality of life and functional fitness among the older adults in Hong Kong. (Please refer to Appendix D for the outcome measurements of the intervention) Objectives (Phase 2-Promotion) 1. To formulate and develop a walking operation manual for the use of implementing an effective walking program for the older adults in Hong Kong. 2. To promote and organize mass walking programs with the format as informed by the Phase 1 study among the older adults in the community (n=900-1080). 3. To raise the government's awareness towards the promotion of an effective walking program as informed by Phase 1 study for achieving the government's goal in promoting active aging.

NCT ID: NCT05778526 Recruiting - Virtual Reality Clinical Trials

Social Virtual-reality on Enhancing Social Interaction Skills in Children With Attention-deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder

Start date: February 18, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The study targets children with diagnosed ADHD and aims to (1) develop a social virtual reality-based intervention, (2) investigate its effects on improving the social skills and executive functioning of inhibitions, emotional control and attention of the children compared to traditional social skills training and (3) evaluate the subjects acceptability and compliance with social VR training for enhancing social interaction skills. It is hypothesised that the social interaction skills of the participants in the social VR training group are likely to perform better than those in the traditional social skills training group. Participants in the waitlist control group will receive no change in social interaction skills compared with the two intervention groups.

NCT ID: NCT05558527 Not yet recruiting - Anxiety Clinical Trials

The Social Regulation of Threat-related Vigilance and Arousal

Start date: September 2024
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study will examine the effects of social support on threat vigilance and arousal using eye tracking. We will also test the moderating effects of trauma and discrimination history.

NCT ID: NCT05503745 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Cognitive Dysfunction

MICBT for Non-underweight Adults With Eating Disorders

MICBT-ED
Start date: May 31, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Eating disorders (ED) are severe but treatable conditions, but there are large margin for improvements in terms of efficacy and adherence. There is room to explore new treatment options who are either more capable to retain patients in therapy, more effective. Alternative their efficacy may match the ones of current available treatments but offer new options to ones that did not respond to available therapies. Here the investigators explored if a combination of CBT-focused plus Metacognitive Interpersonal Therapy (MIT) is an empirically supported therapy for personality disorders and could be a new viable treatment option for non-underweight ED. MIT targets some aspects of ED such as poor awareness of mental states and maladaptive interpersonal schemas that are not included in the transdiagnostic model underlying the most investigated empirically supported treatment for ED that is CBT-E. It is reasonable therefore that targeting these aspects of psychopathology can be a path to treatment adherence and effectiveness

NCT ID: NCT05345405 Recruiting - Stress Clinical Trials

Clinical Trial of a Supporter-Targeted Intervention to Improve Outcomes in Recent Sexual Assault Survivors

CARE
Start date: May 18, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Communication and Recovery Enhancement (CARE) is a 2-session early intervention for survivors of recent sexual assault and their supporters that aims to improve supporters' ability to respond effectively. The goal of this pilot trial is to understand the acceptability and preliminary efficacy of two versions of CARE: a version in which survivors and supporters attend both sessions together (dyadic CARE) and a version in which supporters attend sessions alone (supporter-only CARE). Survivors aged 14+ with elevated posttraumatic stress symptoms will enroll with a supporter of their choosing. Dyads will be randomized to dyadic CARE, supporter-only CARE, or waitlist control, and will complete self-report assessments at baseline, post-session-1, and follow-ups (1, 2, and 3 months post-baseline). Results will be used to inform future changes to CARE and determine whether a fully-powered randomized controlled trial is warranted.