Stroke Clinical Trial
Official title:
Detection of Error Related Potentials in Stroke Patients
The purpose of this study is to characterize specific brain signals elicited by motor disturbances and errors in stroke patients. The patients will perform a motor task using both their affected and unaffected hands. There are two types of errors: low level errors and high level errors. While disturbances (low level errors) have been shown to elicit P300, uncorrectable actions (high level errors) have been shown to elicit ERN. These event related potentials (ERP) have been extensively studied in healthy subjects including a recent paper from our Lab.
The experiment includes two parts, cognitive and motor parts, which will be conducted over
different sessions in different days. Patients will fill in a consent form, and pre
questionnaire form in the first session, and a post questionnaire at the end the last
session.
EEG activity and eye movements will be recorded using BrainProducts EEG system. At the
beginning of each session an EEG cap will be placed on the patient's head and conductive gel
will be inserted between the cap and the head.
Session I - cognitive part: The cognitive parts involves the well-known oddball and Eriksen
flanker tasks, which are expected to elicit P300 and ERN, respectively. Both tasks will be
performed in one session unless the patient will be tired, in which case they will be
performed in two sessions (in two different days). In the oddball task patients will be shown
a sequence of simple geometrical shapes, including a standard blue circle, a large blue
circle and a square. The probability of these shapes will be 80%, 10% and 10%, respectively.
Each shape will appear for 100mse every 1500-2000msec. Patients will be asked to press the
space-bar (with the unaffected hand) when the large blue circle appears. There will be 3
blocks of 400 shapes each. This task will last one hour with breaks between the blocks. In
the Eriksen flanker task patients will be shown a sequence of congruent, non-congruent and
neutral stimuli. Each stimulus will include a central pair of arrows, flanked at the top and
bottom by two other pairs of either arrows or squares. In congruent and non-congruent stimuli
the top and bottom pairs include arrows that are either in the same (congruent) or opposite
(non-congruent) direction as the central pair, while in neutral stimuli the top and bottom
pairs are squares. Each stimulus will appear for 200msec every 1500-2000msec. Patients will
be asked to press the left or right arrow on the keyboard (with the unaffected hand)
according to the direction of the arrows in the central pair as fast as possible. There will
be 8 blocks of 64 stimuli each and will last 45-60min, including breaks.
Sessions II-V: Patients will sit in front of a computer screen and will play a simple
computer game by moving a cursor using a Joystick, and reaching the target on the screen.
Each block of reaching movements will be conducted with the same hand, and different blocks
will be conducted with the affected or unaffected hands. During reaching movements with the
unaffected hand there will be random jumps in the position of the target and/or cursor. The
number of reaching movements in each block will be adjusted to the comfort of each patient,
but will be limited to 50. A total of 250 reaching movements will be performed with each
hand, over 60-120min depending on the number and duration of the breaks. The experiment will
be conducted over 1-4 sessions depending on how long the patient will be able to participate
in each day.
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