View Clinical Trial (Medical Research Study)
Fear Conditioning Using Computer-Generated Virtual Reality - NCT00025844-20892(Clinical Trial 113821)
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| City: |
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Bethesda |
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State:
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MD |
| Zip Code: |
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20892 |
| Conditions: |
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Anxiety Disorder |
| Purpose: |
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The purpose of this study is to use a computer-generated virtual reality environment to
study fear conditioning. Fear conditioning is used to explore the causes and persistence of
anxiety and anxiety disorders.
When confronted with fearful or unpleasant events, people can develop fear of specific cues
that were associated with these events as well as to the environmental context in which the
events occurred via a process called classical or aversive conditioning. Advances in
computer-generated visual stimulations could facilitate the design of new aversive
conditioning studies. This study will develop a virtual reality environment to examine human
contextual fear conditioning in the laboratory. During the procedure, moderately painful
stimuli will be administered. Participants in this study will be screened with a medical
history, physical examination, psychiatric evaluation, and hearing test. Participants will
wear headphones and special goggles that will enable them to view a virtual reality
environment. Measures will be taken during the study to see how the brain adapts to
environmental stimuli....
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| Study summary: |
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Fear conditioning paradigms are tools to explore symptoms of anxiety disorders. During fear
conditioning, the organism develops fear to the phasic explicit cue (e.g., a light) that was
associated with the aversive unconditioned stimulus (e.g., a shock) during conditioning as
well as to the environmental context (e.g., the experimental room). Explicit cue
conditioning and context conditioning are separate processes mediated by distinct brain
structures. Whereas explicit cue conditioning is only dependent on the amygdala, context
conditioning involves the amygdala, the hippocampus and the bed nucleus of the stria
terminalis (BNST). We have been using explicit cue and context conditioning as models of
phasic fear and sustained anxiety, respectively. However, contextual fear is relatively
difficult to study in humans in the laboratory because it requires two experimental sessions
and the use of different experimental rooms. Advances in computer-generated visual
stimulation now offer the possibility to develop more sophisticated paradigms in the
laboratory that could facilitate the design of fear conditioning studies. In addition,
compared to traditional paradigms, computer generated three-dimensional stimulation provides
the opportunity to create more realistic virtual environment. The main objective of this
study is to use virtual reality to further our understanding of fear conditioning in humans. |
| Criteria: |
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- INCLUSION CRITERIA:
Subjects will be healthy volunteers ages 7-50 recruited through advertisements in the
local media.
Subjects will be free of current or past psychotic disorder and organic central nervous
system disorders.
All children will be screened for lifetime history of psychiatric disorders using the
K-SADS Interview. The interview will be administered by a trained clinician (at least
master level) supervised by Dr. Pine.
The children/adolescents will be able to give assent and parents will give consent.
They will have an IQ greater than 70 based on WASI.
EXCLUSION CRITERIA:
Ongoing medical illness that could interfere with the study
Current psychiatric or neurological disorder (including seizure)
Past psychotic disorder; Current substance abuse
Current psychotropic medication. |
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| Study is available at: |
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National Institutes of Health Clinical Center, 9000 Rockville Pike Bethesda, MD 20892 United States
Primary Contact: Patient Recruitment and Public Liaison Office Email: prpl@mail.cc.nih.gov Phone: (800) 411-1222 |
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If you are interested in this clinical trial please use the contact information above. If you would like to get additional information about this clinical trial please visit ClinicalTrials.gov.
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| Data Source: |
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ClinicalTrials.gov |
| Date Processed: |
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March 21, 2011 |
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