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Reward Circuit Modulation Via fMRI-informed-EEG-based Musical Neurofeedback

T

Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Healthy

Treatments

Other: Brain-computer-interface: EEG-based musical Neurofeedback task

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04876170
0401-17-TLV
00040030000 (Other Grant/Funding Number)

Details and patient eligibility

About

The goal of this study is to test whether voluntary up-regulation of mesolimbic reward system activation is possible, and to examine the neurobehavioral effects of specific neuromodulation of this circuit on reward processing. This goal will be achieved by testing the effects of a novel non-invasive experimental framework for neuromodulation that relies on neurofeedback (NF), which is guided by neuronal activation in the ventral striatum (VS) and interfaced with personalized pleasurable music as feedback. We Hypothesize that it is possible to learn to volitionally regulate the VS using this musical NF approach. We further predict that successful NF training for up-regulating the VS-EFP signal will result in marked changes in neural and behavioral outcomes associated with upregulation of dopaminergic signaling.

Full description

Neurofeedback is a training approach in which people learn to regulate their brain activity by using a feedback signal that reflects real-time brain signals. An effective utilization of this approach requires that the represented brain activity be measured with high specificity, yet in an accessible manner, enabling repeated sessions. Evidence suggests that individuals are capable to volitionally regulate their own regional neural activation, including in deep brain regions such as the VS via real-time functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (rt-fMRI). Yet, the utility of rt-fMRI-NF for repeated training is limited due to immobility, high-cost and extensive physical requirements. Electroencephalography (EEG), on the other hand, is low-cost and accessible. However, the behavioral and clinical benefits of EEG-NF, especially within the context of depression and other affective disorders are still debated. Previous work from Hendler's lab has established a novel framework for an accessible probing of specific brain networks termed electrical fingerprinting [1]. The fingerprinting relies on the statistical modeling of an fMRI-inspired EEG pattern based on a simultaneous recording of EEG/fMRI in combination with learning algorithms. This approach has been successfully applied and validated for the amygdala, revealing successful modulation of the EFP-amygdala signal during NF training, as well as lingering neuronal and behavioral effects among trainees, relative to sham-NF training. In the current study, the NF training procedure utilizes a newly developed fMRI-inspired EEG model of mesolimbic activity, centered on the VS; VS-electrical fingerprint (VS-EFP). Furthermore, to improve accessibility to the mesolimbic system, the feedback interface is based on pleasurable music, which has been repeatedly shown to engage the reward circuit and lead to dopaminergic release within the striatum [e.g, 2; cf. 3]. The basic principle behind the musical interface is that during training, participants are presented with their self-selected music, which becomes more or less acoustically distorted so as to reliably alter its level of pleasantness in real-time. A feasibility study with twenty participants (N=10 test group, N=10 control group), which was conducted at McGill, demonstrated the feasibility of this approach. In the current study, we wish to replicate and extend these findings in a larger sample (N=~40; N=20 test group and N=20 sham-control group) and to test the hypotheses arisen in this study with regards to its possible neurobehavioral outcomes.

Enrollment

40 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 65 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

Healthy without known background diseases Without known cognitive decline Have normal hearing Dominance of the right hand No history of psychiatric or neurological illnesses requiring hospitalization. The accepted criteria for inclusion for an MRI examination for medical purposes will apply, in accordance with the procedures established at the MRI Institute at the Sourasky Medical Center in Tel Aviv.

Exclusion criteria

Has a diagnosis of psychiatric or neurological diseases Uses psychiatric or neurological medications Hearing loss The accepted criteria for exclusion for an MRI examination for medical purposes will apply, according to the procedures established at the MRI Institute at the Sourasky Medical Center in Tel Aviv

Trial design

Primary purpose

Basic Science

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Triple Blind

40 participants in 2 patient groups

VS-EFP Neurofeedback
Active Comparator group
Description:
Neurofeedback is based on the learned change in a particular neural signal or a combination of neural signals when feedback and reward of these signals are repeatedly presented to the organism. Thus, individuals learn to modulate their neural activity through a closed NF loop; in this condition, participants will receive musical feedback driven by their own VS-EFP
Treatment:
Other: Brain-computer-interface: EEG-based musical Neurofeedback task
Yoked sham Neurofeedback
Sham Comparator group
Description:
Neurofeedback is based on the learned change in a particular neural signal or a combination of neural signals when feedback and reward of these signals are repeatedly presented to the organism. Thus, individuals learn to modulate their neural activity through a closed NF loop; in this condition, the musical feedback will be provided based on another participant's VS-EFP signal. Hence, each participant from the sham group is paired with a participant from the test group, thus receiving feedback based on the paired test participant. This way, both groups are exposed to the exact proportion of sound manipulation that indicates their success level. To account for a possible contribution of the temporal order of feedback presentation, in half of the control participants, the feedback pattern will be "replayed" forward (maintaining the original temporal pattern of VS-EFP that the paired participant has received), and in half - backward (flipping the original temporal pattern right-to-left).
Treatment:
Other: Brain-computer-interface: EEG-based musical Neurofeedback task

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Neomi Singer, PhD; Talma Hendler, MD, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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