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A Lego Robot Programming Intervention for Enhancing Older Adult Cognitive Health

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National Taiwan University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Cognitive Inferential Ability

Treatments

Behavioral: Lego Robot Programming Active Challenges
Behavioral: Lego Robot Programming Procedural Methods
Behavioral: Board Games

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05341232
202103148RINC

Details and patient eligibility

About

The population in Taiwan is rapidly aging with an increasing proportion of older persons who experience cognitive difficulties but are otherwise physically healthy. As such there is a critical and urgent need for effective interventions to enhance older adult cognitive health. This present sub-project is part of the larger integrated project that will address this need by conducting cognitive training interventions on community older adults using the National Taiwan Science Education Center (NTSEC) as the public engagement window and collecting research behavioral and neurophysiological data to empirically and objectively examine intervention efficacies. In this sub-project, the investigators implement a clinical trial to evaluate an open-ended, flexible cognitive training intervention in middle to older adults aged 50 yrs or above using a 12-week Lego Robot Programming (Lego RP) protocol developed in the investigators' lab at the Graduate Institute of Brain and Mind Sciences, College of Medicine, National Taiwan University. The Lego RP training requires participants to generate and update abstract mental hypotheses of the effect of program codes on the physical actions of a robot based on how the robot behaves. Such mental processing is thought to drive flexible coordination between neural processes in the brain and benefit a broad range of cognitive abilities in older adults. The investigators target to obtain pre- and post-intervention behavioral and neurophysiological data (including brain imaging indicators) in 40 experimental participants, 40 active control participants, and 40 passive control participants over a period of 3 years.

Full description

The population in Taiwan is rapidly aging with an increasing proportion of older persons who experience cognitive difficulties but are otherwise physically healthy. As such there is a critical and urgent need for effective interventions to enhance older adult cognitive health. This present sub-project is part of the larger integrated project that will address this need by conducting cognitive training interventions on community older adults using the National Taiwan Science Education Center (NTSEC) as the public engagement window and collecting research behavioral and neurophysiological data to empirically and objectively examine intervention efficacies. In this sub-project, the investigators implement a clinical trial to evaluate an open-ended, flexible cognitive training intervention in middle to older adults aged 50 yrs or above using a 12-week Lego Robot Programming (Lego RP) protocol developed in the investigators' lab at the Graduate Institute of Brain and Mind Sciences, College of Medicine, National Taiwan University. The Lego RP training requires participants to generate and update abstract mental hypotheses of the effect of program codes on the physical actions of a robot based on how the robot behaves. Such mental processing is thought to drive flexible coordination between neural processes in the brain and benefit a broad range of cognitive abilities in older adults. The investigators target to obtain pre- and post-intervention behavioral and neurophysiological data (including brain imaging indicators) in 40 experimental participants, 40 active control participants, and 40 passive control participants over a period of 3 years. The investigators will also coordinate with the other sub-projects to assign participants to the different interventions involved as well as research data collection, which is shared. In contrast to previous studies of older adult cognitive training, the investigators expect this present approach, which leverages neurocognitive principles, to result in notable transfer between different cognitive abilities, and meaningful impact on daily functioning. The NTSEC recently seeks to engage the public, particularly children and older adults in STEAM education (Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts, Mathematics) to inspire and equip the population with the spirit of learning, discovery, and challenge-seeking, which is thought to raise mental resilience. Thus, the investigators' public outreach and research goals are highly complementary and the work is expected to yield more ecologically valid research data on a novel class of cognitive interventions for cognitive aging using psychological and brain imaging techniques to bridge critical neural mechanistic knowledge gaps. In addition, the research study will apply real public education benefits in society for those approximately 300 older participants who will participate in this study.

Enrollment

48 patients

Sex

All

Ages

65+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Literate in Mandarin and Taiwanese
  • Willing and able to participate in this research protocol in its entirety.
  • Age >65

Exclusion criteria

  • Participated in cognitive-related training in the past two months.
  • Diagnosed with mild cognitive impairment (MCI)
  • Severe psychological or behavioral disorder that would seriously interfere with the progress of activity
  • History of degenerative cognitive disorder.
  • Counter-indications for MRI scanning.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Basic Science

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Triple Blind

48 participants in 3 patient groups, including a placebo group

Problem-Solving Training
Experimental group
Description:
Participants will learn to program LEGO robots and will be encouraged to actively solve problems.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Lego Robot Programming Procedural Methods
Behavioral: Lego Robot Programming Active Challenges
Step-By-Step Training
Active Comparator group
Description:
Participants will learn to program LEGO robots and will be instructed step by step.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Lego Robot Programming Procedural Methods
Board Games
Placebo Comparator group
Description:
Participants will play boards games under a schedule matching the Experimental and Active Comparator arms.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Board Games

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Central trial contact

Joshua OS Goh, Ph. D.

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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