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Stimulating Compassion UsingTranscutaneous Vagus Nerve Stimulation

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Healthy Volunteers
Interventions
Behavioral: Active self-compassion imagery
Device: Active transcutaneous vagus nerve stimulation
Device: Sham transcutaneous vagus nerve stimulation
Behavioral: Sham mental imagery
Registration Number
NCT05441774
Lead Sponsor
University College, London
Brief Summary

This experimental proof-of-concept study in healthy volunteers investigates whether a specific form of self-relating, namely, self-compassion, can be controlled through non-invasive stimulation of the vagus nerve. The vagus nerve is part of the parasympathetic nervous system (the 'rest and digest' system) and its fibers are spread throughout the upper body, face, and neck, including a branch that innervates parts of the external ear (e.g. the tragus), close to the surface of the skin. This allows the 'auricular branch' of the vagus nerve to be readily stimulated electrically. Importantly, this can be achieved non-invasively using a transcutaneous vagus nerve stimulation (tVNS) device. The investigators will test the effects of tVNS alone and in combination with a meditation-like technique that is intended to increase participants' feelings of self-compassion (self-compassion imagery). In particular, the investigators will assess participants' experience of self-compassion and self-criticism, as well as other outcome measures, before and during stimulation, and again after they perform the self-compassionate imagery exercise. These effects will be compared to three other groups: one that receives tVNS along with a control (sham) imagery procedure, another that receives sham tVNS and self-compassion imagery, and a final group that receives sham tVNS and sham imagery. It is expected that the group that receives active tVNS and the self-compassion imagery exercise will experience the largest average increases in self-compassion and decreases in self-criticism. The findings of this study will help us better understand the role of the vagus nerve in complex cognitive-emotional experiences - like compassion - and may also motivate the development of bioelectronic stimulation methods that can be used alongside psychological techniques for improving self-compassion and reducing self-criticism, particularly among people with certain psychological disorders.

Detailed Description

The role of the vagus nerve in regulating cardiac, respiratory, and gut functioning via brainstem nuclei is well-established. More recently, its role has been examined in relation to the modulation of higher cognitive functions. Bodily signals (e.g. from the heart or gut) conveyed by vagal afferents could affect cognitive functioning via projections from the nucleus of the solitary tract (NTS) to the locus coeruleus and thence to widespread cortical areas through noradrenergic outputs. In addition, the NTS transmits sensory-visceral information to the central autonomic network, which includes higher brain areas (e.g. prefrontal cortex). Recent research suggests that vagus nerve activity is associated with a range of psychological functions including memory, executive function, and threat/fear processing. In addition, biobehavioral theories of vagal functioning, and emerging empirical evidence suggest a role for the vagus nerve in modulating social behavior as well as complex emotional states.

A number of researchers have proposed a role for vagal nerve functioning in well-being, and particularly in generating or modulating feelings of 'safeness', contentedness, and relaxation that underlie complex social-affective-motivational states, such as compassion. Previous research has examined the effects of inducing compassionate feelings while measuring vagus nerve activity (via heart rate variability). However, to our knowledge, no published study has demonstrated an association between vagal activity and compassion by directly modulating the vagus nerve itself. Such studies have important theoretical implications but are also potentially valuable in the future development of interventions that employ tVNS or similar technology to augment psychological treatments that employ compassion-focused techniques (e.g. compassionate mind training; compassion-focused cognitive therapy; loving-kindness meditation-based treatments, etc.)

The current experiment aims to determine if vagus nerve activation using tVNS is sufficient to generate positive affective states, especially compassion (specifically, self-reported self-compassion). Alternatively, tVNS may produce a permissive physiological context that facilitates compassionate responding. For example, tVNS may synergize the effects of a compassion-inducing behavioral intervention. To examine these possibilities, the investigators will test the separate and combined (interacting) effects of tVNS and a compassion-induction procedure (self-compassion mental imagery) compared to sham conditions, in a four-group factorial (2 x 2) design. Participants will be randomly assigned to (i) active tVNS + sham imagery, (ii) active tVNS + active self-compassion imagery, (iii) sham-tVNS + active self-compassion and (iv) sham-tVNS + sham imagery.

In addition to examining the effects of stimulation and imagery conditions on self-compassion, the investigators will also test their effects on other types of positive affect, as well as self-criticism, which is an opposing form of self-representation to self-compassion. Self-criticism is a transdiagnostic psychological marker of psychopathology, and measures of self-criticism are sensitive to the effects of compassion-focused interventions , including brief self-compassion imagery, as will be used here. Vagal activity will be indexed using heart rate variability, and effects of stimulation and imagery will additionally be tested on attentional bias (e.g. first fixation, increased dwell time) to compassionate facial expressions.

Participants attend two lab sessions (on Day 1 and 8) in which they will undergo either supervised active or sham tVNS and either the self-compassion or sham imagery exercise (delivered as standardized audio instructions), per their randomized condition. Assessments of heart rate variability, self-compassion, self-criticism, positive state affect, and state mindfulness will occur before stimulation, during stimulation, and after the imagery exercise. In addition, participants will complete the Day 1 stimulation procedure and imagery task on Days 2-7, guided via online audio and written instructions. This will allow us to test the effects of extended (daily) stimulation and imagery practice. Additional study details are available on the Open Science Framework (osf.io/k2dje).

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
120
Inclusion Criteria
  • Fluency in English
  • Good (including corrected) vision and hearing.
Exclusion Criteria
  • Current use of any medication for a psychiatric condition
  • Regular use of any medication used to treat a cardiovascular condition or inflammation
  • Use of any illicit recreational drug >2/week
  • Regularly consuming >14 standard UK 'units' of alcohol
  • Currently receiving treatment for any mental health condition
  • Scores on screening measures of depression (PHQ-2) and/or anxiety (GAD-2) that indicate significant levels of current/recent anxiety or depression (scores on either >4)
  • History of serious mental health problems (schizophrenia, bipolar disorder)
  • Past or current cardiovascular or neurological problems
  • Current/past problems related to chronic/recurring facial or ear pain
  • Skin irritation/ broken skin at stimulation site
  • Pregnancy or likelihood of becoming pregnant during study
  • Previous adverse response to meditation.

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
FACTORIAL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Sham stimulation plus active self-compassion imageryActive self-compassion imagerySingle (stimulation) sham group: earlobe (sham) stimulation; imagery task will involve directing compassion to the self (self-compassion, active imagery).
Active stimulation plus sham imageryActive transcutaneous vagus nerve stimulationSingle (imagery) sham group: Stimulator electrodes will be applied to the tragus (active stimulation); 'draw-a-face-in-imagination' (sham imagery) task.
Active stimulation plus active self-compassion imageryActive self-compassion imageryDouble active group: tragus (active) stimulation; self-compassion (active imagery)
Sham stimulation plus sham imagerySham transcutaneous vagus nerve stimulationDouble sham group: Stimulator electrodes will be applied to earlobe (sham stimulation); imagery task will involve a 'draw-a-face-in-imagination' (sham imagery) task.
Sham stimulation plus sham imagerySham mental imageryDouble sham group: Stimulator electrodes will be applied to earlobe (sham stimulation); imagery task will involve a 'draw-a-face-in-imagination' (sham imagery) task.
Active stimulation plus sham imagerySham mental imagerySingle (imagery) sham group: Stimulator electrodes will be applied to the tragus (active stimulation); 'draw-a-face-in-imagination' (sham imagery) task.
Sham stimulation plus active self-compassion imagerySham transcutaneous vagus nerve stimulationSingle (stimulation) sham group: earlobe (sham) stimulation; imagery task will involve directing compassion to the self (self-compassion, active imagery).
Active stimulation plus active self-compassion imageryActive transcutaneous vagus nerve stimulationDouble active group: tragus (active) stimulation; self-compassion (active imagery)
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Heart rate variability1 week

Root mean square of successive differences (commonly, RMSSD) between normal beats; high-frequency power. Higher levels indicate greater heart rate variability (a desirable outcome)

State self-compassion1 week

Self-compassion subscale of the scenario-based self-compassion and self-criticism Scales (SCCS; Falconer et al, 2015). Score range: 15 (minimum) to 105 (maximum). High scores indicate greater self-compassion (desirable outcome)

State self-criticism1 week

Self-criticism subscale of the SCCS (Falconer et al, 2015). Score range: 15 (minimum) to 105 (maximum). High scores indicate greater self-criticism (undesirable outcome)

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
State positive affect (Safe/content)1 week

Safe/content positive affect subscale of the Types of Positive Affect Scale (TPAS; Gilbert et al., 2008). Range of scores: 0 (minimum) -16 (maximum), with higher levels indicating greater levels of 'safeness'/contentedness (desirable outcome)

Eye-tracking attention metrics1 week

Dwell time, first fixation and pupillometric indices of attentional bias to compassionate facial expressions (stimuli from Falconer et al., 2019). Faces differ in intensity (25%, 50%, 75%, 100% compassion) versus matched neutral expression.

State mindfulness1 week

5 items (2 body, 2 mind, and 1 activity-related mindfulness items) from the State Mindfulness Scale (Tanay \& Bernstein, 2013) as used by Shohan et al (2017). The range (average across items) is 1 to 5, with high levels indicating greater state mindfulness (desirable outcome).

State positive and negative affect1 week

Positive affects subscale of the International positive and negative affect schedule-SF (iPANAS, 10 item version; Thompson, 2007). Range of scores 5 (minimum) - 25 (maximum) for positive affect and 5-25 for negative affect, with higher scores indicating greater amounts of positive (desirable) and negative (undesirable) affect respectively.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Clinical Psychopharmacology Unit

🇬🇧

London, United Kingdom

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