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Investigating Surprise Signals in the Anterior Insula

University Hospitals (UH) logo

University Hospitals (UH)

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Healthy
Drug Resistant Epilepsy

Treatments

Other: SEEG stimulation
Behavioral: Adaptation task

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05997758
2022-02041

Details and patient eligibility

About

The investigators propose a behavioral experiment with SEEG recording and stimulation, to both confirm the role of a brain region known as the anterior insula in identifying surprise, and disambiguate between competing principles behind adaptation: optimizing and satisficing. Optimizers continue to learn and adapt if performance can be improved, while satisficers are satisfied with a good enough performance and will cease adapting once that is reached.

To study surprise signals in the anterior insula, a brain structure where these signals have been very prominent, the investigators will employ an experiment with subjects who are under SEEG (stereoelectroencephalogram) recording, that is, recording from electrodes which have been surgically implanted in the brain. These recordings will be done as patients perform a task where they try to anticipate the movements of a target on a line in two different learning environments (conditions). The experimenters will then determine whether these signals reflect surprise relative to past engagement with the environment, or surprise that reveals that the agent no longer feels in control because uncertainty is not in line with the reference model. If evidence is consistent with the former, adaptation reflects traditional reinforcement and aims at optimizing behavior. If evidence instead is consistent with the latter, behavior is guided by a prior model (a reference model) and behavior is satisficing.

An fMRI study by d'Acremont and Bossaerts provides initial evidence that activation in the anterior insula supports the satisficing hypothesis, however it lacks the temporal granularity to completely rule out optimizing. In the current project, the investigators propose to use the higher time resolution of SEEG recordings to confirm these findings and reject the optimizing hypothesis.

Additionally, stimulations of the anterior insula during a subset of trials will be used to determine whether insular activation following surprise signals and preceding changes in behavior (learning) is merely correlational or in fact causal. Stimulation will allow us to determine to what extent the subjects' sense of control and subsequent behavior can be influenced in accordance with surprise-based modeling of behavior.

The cohort for this study will be patients with drug-resistant, focal epilepsy and who are hospitalized at the Hôpitaux Universitaires de Genève (HUG) for pre-surgical evaluation of their epilepsy using SEEG. The protocol will run in parallel with the patients' clinical procedures.

Enrollment

50 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • 18 years or older
  • Fluent in French or English
  • Patient who suffers from potentially surgically remediable drug-resistant focal epilepsy
  • Patient who requires evaluation with intracranial stereo-EEG electrodes and has them implanted in the anterior insula
  • Patient who is able and willing to provide informed consent

Exclusion criteria

  • Severe concomitant psychiatric disease or major psychological distress

  • Patients who have an implanted stimulation device (e.g. pacemaker, defibrillator, neurostimulator)

  • Intellectual/neurological/psychiatric deficiencies* or inability to understand or follow the procedure

  • Visual/motor deficiencies which could affect task performance

  • The presence of seizures during routine clinical stimulation of insular electrodes

  • Failure to complete the pre-experiment task training

    • As determined by their clinical evaluation.

Trial design

50 participants in 2 patient groups

Patients
Description:
Patients who suffer from potentially surgically remediable drug-resistant focal epilepsy and who require evaluation with intracranial stereo-EEG electrodes and have them implanted in the anterior insula. N = 10
Treatment:
Behavioral: Adaptation task
Other: SEEG stimulation
Subclinical
Description:
Healthy individuals who match the clinical population in age and level of education. N = 40
Treatment:
Behavioral: Adaptation task

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Fabienne Picard, MD; Nina Sooter

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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