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The Power of Belief: Expectation-driven and Placebo Modulation of Empathic Pain (PoB-EP)

U

University of Electronic Science and Technology of China

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Healthy Participants

Treatments

Drug: Intranasal Oxytocin (OT) 24 IU
Drug: Intranasal placebo administration

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT07367672
UESTC-neuSCAN-102

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study investigates how belief and expectation influence empathic pain-the pain we feel when observing others in distress. Healthy adult participants will be randomly assigned to one of three groups: no-treatment control, placebo nasal spray, oxytocin-containing nasal spray. Participants in both the placebo and oxytocin conditions will be informed that they are receiving oxytocin, described as a potent agent for pain relief. During functional MRI scanning, all participants will view naturalistic pain-related videos and provide ratings of perceived subjective pain. The study aims to examine how cognitive beliefs and neuromodulatory interventions alter subjective pain experience and brain activity, including changes in brain network communication.

Full description

This study examines how belief-driven expectations modulate empathic pain at both behavioral and neural levels. Healthy adult participants will be randomly assigned to one of three groups: no-treatment control, placebo nasal spray, oxytocin-containing nasal spray. Participants in both the placebo and oxytocin conditions will be informed that they are receiving oxytocin, described as a potent agent for pain relief.

During fMRI scanning, participants will complete a naturalistic empathic pain task by viewing videos depicting others in pain and rating their perceived pain on a standardized scale. Behavioral data will be transformed into analgesia-weighted scores to capture individual sensitivity to expectation-driven analgesia. Neural data will include whole-brain voxel-wise activity, multivariate predictive patterns derived from partial least squares regression (PLSR), and directed functional connectivity assessed using lagged partial-correlation directionality analysis (LPC-DA) to evaluate top-down and bottom-up information flow.

The primary objectives are to (1) assess the behavioral effects of expectation-driven analgesia, (2) identify brain regions predictive of pain modulation, and (3) characterize hierarchical network reorganization under different interventions.

Enrollment

120 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 30 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • (1) Healthy subjects without any past or present psychiatric or neurological disorders; (2) Healthy subjects without any current psychotherapeutic medication.

Exclusion criteria

  • (1) Participant with any past or present psychiatric or neurological disorders; (2)Participant with any current psychotherapeutic medication.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Basic Science

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

120 participants in 3 patient groups

Intranasal Oxytocin
Active Comparator group
Description:
Administer oxytocin (24 IU) intranasally.
Treatment:
Drug: Intranasal Oxytocin (OT) 24 IU
Intranasal placebo
Active Comparator group
Description:
Administer placebo intranasally.
Treatment:
Drug: Intranasal placebo administration
Intranasal nothing (control)
No Intervention group
Description:
Control condition

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Central trial contact

Keith Kendrick; Weihua Zhao

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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