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Impact of Another Person's Presence on Brain and Behavioral Performance (SOFEE)

H

Hôpital le Vinatier

Status

Terminated

Conditions

Behavior and Behavior Mechanisms

Treatments

Behavioral: neuropsychological tests

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03453216
2016-A01477-44

Details and patient eligibility

About

In a recent study, investigators provided the first neuroscientific data on social facilitation. This neuroimaging study, performed in the macaque monkey, shows a marked improvement in performance in a simple task when a congener is present compared to when the animal performs the task alone. This social facilitation is accompanied by a significant increase in brain activity within the fronto-parietal network of attention. No variation in activity, however, is observed in the cerebral network of motivation. These results argue in favor of the implication of attentional processes in the phenomenon of social facilitation. The challenge now is to determine whether social facilitation is always based on the attention network (whatever the task) or, alternatively, whether it increases activity in any cerebral circuit involved depending on the task performed and the population studied. This hypothesis, which the investigators have named the "multi-mediator model of social facilitation", has the advantage of reconciling the attentional and motivational theories of social facilitation, which are not mutually exclusive. This hypothesis also provides an explanation for the pervasiveness (across species and different ages for humans) of social facilitation. The main objective of SOFEE is to gather neuroscientific evidence to support the multi-facilitator model of social facilitation.

Full description

The main objective is to study the effect of the presence of others on cognitive performance and its evolution during development by behavioral and neural measures. The secondary objective is to identify factors (psychological characteristics such as personality traits) explaining individual, behavioral and neural differences, sensitivity to the presence of others.

Enrollment

112 patients

Sex

All

Ages

8 to 35 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Girl or boy aged ≥ 8 years and ≤ 12 years old for children,
  • Girl or boy aged ≥ 13 years and ≤ 19 years old for teenagers,
  • Woman or man age ≥ 20 years and ≤ 35 years old for young adults,
  • French mother tongue,
  • With the right to a social security scheme or similar,
  • With informed consent form signed by the legal representatives and the subject, for minors,
  • Has signed the informed consent form, for adults.

Exclusion criteria

  • Known acquired neurological disorders, including epilepsy,
  • Known psychiatric disorders,
  • Complications at birth requiring admission to neonatal intensive care unit,
  • Ongoing treatment with drugs affecting the central nervous system,
  • Significant hearing impairment,
  • Uncorrected visual inadequacy,
  • Left manual preference,
  • Contraindications to the MRI examination (people using a pacemaker or an insulin pump, people wearing a metal prosthesis or an intracerebral clip as well as claustrophobic subjects),
  • Refusal of the subject or parents of the subject to be informed of any anomalies detected on the MRI,
  • Pregnancy for women of childbearing age: the possibility of pregnancy will be ruled out on questioning for inclusion,
  • Protected persons other than children

Trial design

Primary purpose

Basic Science

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

112 participants in 1 patient group

Behavioral test and fMRI
Experimental group
Description:
Neuropsychological tests and training in behavioral tasks and a Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) exam
Treatment:
Behavioral: neuropsychological tests

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

VIAL VERONIQUE; Meunier Martine, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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