Skip to main content
Clinical Trials/NCT06361407
NCT06361407
Recruiting
Not Applicable

Sensory and Cognitive Predictions, and Their Disruptions in Schizophrenia

Centre Psychothérapique de Nancy2 sites in 1 country68 target enrollmentJune 28, 2024

Overview

Phase
Not Applicable
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Schizophrenia
Sponsor
Centre Psychothérapique de Nancy
Enrollment
68
Locations
2
Primary Endpoint
Effect of a millisecond-level trajectory perturbation
Status
Recruiting
Last Updated
last month

Overview

Brief Summary

Disturbances in the sense of self and time could play an important role in the development of psychotic symptoms. Previous work has shown that patients have difficulty preparing to process information on the scale of a second, but are abnormally disturbed by slightly asynchronous information on the millisecond scale. In both cases, the anomalies could explain the patients' unusual experience of time. The hypothesis in neurotypical patients is that small delays or asynchronies asynchronies are treated as irrelevant information and ignored and ignored, whereas in patients suffering from schizophrenia they would disrupt the flow of time. This hypothesis is tested with a new visual illusion.

Detailed Description

In the task, two squares move at constant speed in a straight line towards each other. When they collide and disappear neurotypical individuals perceive a gap between the two squares rather than contact. This unexpected effect cannot be explained by a 'cognitive' expectation, since what is consciously expected is collision and contact. It has been shown that it is sensory predictions which explain the illusion of space at the moment of contact. Indeed, a movement trajectory is accompanied by sensory predictions, which help to anticipate the position of the moving object, and of the contrast between the edges of the squares and the background. At the moment of collision, the contrast disappears and is processed as a prediction error. If subjects do not have time to correct the error, they see a gap, as if the figure-ground contrast was still there. Conversely, when a rebound effect is introduced into the task (the squares are moved in the opposite direction after the collision), the illusion diminishes, as if the rebound reinforces the (top-down) expectation of a collision. Perturbations will be introduced during the trajectory in the illusion task with and without rebound to test this hypothesis (acceleration on a millisecond scale vs. uniform speed). Patients suffering from schizophrenia, whose prediction mechanisms are fragile, are expected to be abnormally sensitive to trajectory changes. The experimental manipulations will help to compare sensory prediction (illusion without rebound) and top-down (conscious) prediction (illusion with rebound). The protocol will also help to specify which types of prediction (sensory or cognitive) underlie patients' sense patients' sense of self. In short, the protocol is designed to improve the pathophysiological understanding of sense-of-self disorders in schizophrenia

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
June 28, 2024
End Date
October 28, 2027
Last Updated
last month
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Single Group
Sex
All

Investigators

Sponsor
Centre Psychothérapique de Nancy
Responsible Party
Sponsor

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Male or female;
  • Age between 18 and 60 inclusive;
  • Subject having dated and signed the consent form prior to the start of any trial-related procedure (guardian or curator where applicable);
  • Member of a social security scheme or beneficiary of such a scheme.

Exclusion Criteria

  • Psychoactive substance use disorders (as defined by the DSM-V) (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual-V);
  • Use of benzodiazepines, hallucinogens (in the period preceding before inclusion, for a duration equivalent to 5 half-lives of the product) or cannabis (in the 2 months preceding inclusion);
  • Neurological pathology or sequelae;
  • Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD);
  • Borderline personality disorder;
  • Disabling sensory disorders (visual acuity \<0.8);
  • Person deprived of liberty or under court protection;
  • Pregnant, parturient or breast-feeding women;
  • Subjects in a period of exclusion defined by another clinical study.

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Effect of a millisecond-level trajectory perturbation

Time Frame: Month 4

Change in the rate of illusion in case of a trajectory perturbation (compared to the rate of illusion in the absence of perturbation)

Secondary Outcomes

  • Baseline rate of illusion(month 4)
  • Effect of a rebound (top-down, conscious influence)(month 4)

Study Sites (2)

Loading locations...

Similar Trials