Positive Feedback vs. No-Feedback Games for Behavioral Change
- Conditions
- Major Depressive DisorderLow Mood
- Interventions
- Behavioral: positive feedback
- Registration Number
- NCT06025838
- Lead Sponsor
- Bard College
- Brief Summary
We aim to investigate here whether we can develop a reinforcement learning game which provides game-based feedback to encourage positive actions (behaviors) both inside and outside of the game. Does providing positive reward when participants make decisions which are associated with value-based actions (like those in BA) result in different game decisions? We propose that it will increase positive actions in the game. And, secondly, how does it affect short-term behavior (in one week)? We propose that it will increase pro-health activities and may reduce depressive symptoms.
- Detailed Description
We know that behavior influences mood -- our best interventions to improve mood rely upon the relationship between these. Treatments like this are thought to work in part by helping individuals to increase value-derived behaviors; participants are given guidance which results in an increase of positive behaviors and a decrease of coping behaviors that don't help -- that is, their health-seeking behavior is reinforced while behaviors that diminish health are reduced. In past work, we showed that a text-based game could be used to explore what sort of decisions people would make in certain environments. That game showed associations between in-game behaviors and real-life depressive symptoms and actions. Such work focuses on low-level symptoms of depression -- increasingly common, especially after the onset of the covid-19 pandemic. We aim to investigate here whether we can develop a reinforcement learning game which provides game-based feedback to encourage positive actions (behaviors) both inside and outside of the game.
Thus, the experiment described below and proposed in this application would test the role of positive rewards (positive-feedback) in a dichotomous-choice game, compared to neutral (no-feedback).
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- NOT_YET_RECRUITING
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 160
- 18-34 years old
- Fluent in English
- Based in the United States
- None
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description positive feedback positive feedback Participants receive positive feedback and reward for their decisions taken during a small game similar to a normal person's life. For example, they are encouraged to exercise, make food, and interact with friends.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Motivation to change baseline (T0) - after intervention A 7-point item, "It is important to me to do more positive activities in my life". Scores range from 0 \[not at all\] to 6 \[very much\]. Higher scores indicate more motivation to change.
Depressive symptoms (Patient Health Questionnaire-8 item) one week following intervention (T1) 8 items rated in a self-report questionnaire. Scores range from 0 to 24 with higher scores indicating more depression symptoms.
Behavior in study-specific game baseline (T0) For both conditions, behavior and choices made during the game will be used as data for analyses. Game choices allow participants to decide what next activities they will "do" in the game. Analyses incorporate decision probabilities (which of 2 choices are selected) and compare them between conditions. The game is completed at baseline following assessment.
Day Reconstruction Method (DRM) one week following intervention (T1) The DRM measures how people spend their time and asks them how they felt while doing the activities they report. Ratings on a Likert scale indicate valence (how pleasant/unpleasant the activities were) and range from 0 (not at all) to 6 (very much), with higher pleasantness being better (and lower unpleasantness being better).
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Mood and Anxiety Symptoms Questionnaire (MASQ) baseline (T0) - before intervention The MASQ measures mood and anxiety symptoms on three subscales: Anhedonic Depression, Anxious Arousal, and General Distress. Scores on each subscale range from 10 (low symptoms) to 50 (high symptoms). Higher scores indicate more depression, anxiety, and distress.
Mood Ratings one week following intervention (T1) Mood will be rated on positive and negative scales: "On the whole, how sad were you today?" (Rated from 0 \[not at all\] to 6 \[extremely\]); "On the whole, how happy were you today?" (Rated from 0 \[not at all\] to 6 \[extremely\]). Higher scores indicate more sadness or happiness.
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Online research conducted through Bard College
🇺🇸Annandale-on-Hudson, New York, United States