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The Impact of Self-processing on Mental Time Travel

I

Istituti Clinici Scientifici Maugeri SpA

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Brain Injuries, Focal

Treatments

Behavioral: Lifeline task
Behavioral: Mental Time Travel task
Behavioral: Age Estimation control task

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06823193
ICS Maugeri CE 2717

Details and patient eligibility

About

Mental time travel (MTT) refers to the ability to project oneself backward into the past or forward into the future to envision past and future events. This study examines the role of the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) in orienting toward past and future events during MTT.

Full description

Mental Time Travel (MTT) is the ability to project oneself toward another specific temporal location, in the past or future subjective time. Specifically, it requires placing mental events on a subjective timeline by remembering the past or imagining the future. Regarding neural correlates, the subjective experience of remembering the past is associated with the lateral parietal cortex, especially in the inferior parietal lobule (IPL). The involvement of parietal areas in MTT for past events has been confirmed by neuropsychological and neuromodulation studies. Patients with neglect, following a lesion of the right parietal cortex, show a deficit in judging events that occurred before a specific temporal reference, suggesting an impairment in the representation of past events. Using transcranial alternate continuos stimulation (tACS) D'Angelo and colleagues (2023) showed that parietal beta frequencies selectively alter participants' ability to project into the past, but not into the future. Regarding future processing, the involvement of prefrontal cortex has been widely reported. The dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) plays a key role in planning, while the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) is involved in future scenario construction. In addition, vmPFC patients are unable to project into the future and anticipate events ahead, supporting a crucial role of the vmPFC in future construction.

Parietal and prefrontal areas are also involved in the processing of self-related information. In particular, the right lateral parietal cortex is more involved in retrieving self-related information than other-related information. Regarding the role of prefrontal regions in processing the self, the vmPFC shows greater activity when imagining a mental scenario related to the self rather than to another person.

To better understand MTT ability, two important questions arise from the review of the relevant literature. First, does self-related information affect our ability to mentally travel in time? If so, may these two processes interact in the same brain areas? VmPFC might be a good candidate for the interaction between future projection and self-processing: self-related stimuli could increase one's ability to "move" to future MTT.

Regarding past and self-related processing, the role of the right lateral parietal cortex is still unclear. IPL neural activity could underlie both processes, thus revealing a crucial centre for the interplay between MTT past projection and self-processing (autobiographical component of MTT).

The purpose of the present study is to investigate the influence of self-related stimuli in MTT tasks in patients with focal brain injury. Specifically, the authors will test for the first time whether the temporal distance between present time and the likelihood that a life event will occur (or has already occurred) is different whether the event is referred to one's own face or someone else's face.

Enrollment

66 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

40 to 80 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • the absence of general cognitive impairment, assessed by neuropsychological testing
  • the presence of a focal brain lesion will be adopted as an inclusion criterion for patients.

Exclusion criteria

  • psychiatric disorders
  • multiple brain lesions

Trial design

Primary purpose

Basic Science

Allocation

Non-Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

66 participants in 3 patient groups

Healthy participants
Active Comparator group
Description:
All participants performed the MTT task, the Age estimation task and the Lifeline task.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Age Estimation control task
Behavioral: Mental Time Travel task
Behavioral: Lifeline task
vmPFC patients
Experimental group
Description:
All participants performed the MTT task, the Age estimation task and the Lifeline task.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Age Estimation control task
Behavioral: Mental Time Travel task
Behavioral: Lifeline task
not-vmPFC patients
Active Comparator group
Description:
All participants performed the MTT task, the Age estimation task and the Lifeline task.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Age Estimation control task
Behavioral: Mental Time Travel task
Behavioral: Lifeline task

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Giulia Franco, Psy; Giuliana Vezzadini, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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