Neurofeedback Training For Older Adults
Depression, Anxiety
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Depression, Anxiety focused on measuring Neurofeedback, Prefrontal Cortex
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria: (i) age of 60-79 years; (ii) right-handedness as assessed using the short form of the Edinburgh Handedness Inventory (Veale, 2014); (iii) a moderate or higher score on at least one of the depression and anxiety subscales (but not necessarily both) of the Depression Anxiety Stress Scale-21 (DASS-21), which has been shown to yield reliable and valid scores; (iv) no history of neurological or psychiatric disorder; (v) no history of traumatic brain injury requiring hospitalisation; (vi) not currently using psychotropic medication; (vii) ability to read Traditional Chinese text; (viii) normal or corrected-to-normal vision; and (ix) a score of at least 19 on the Hong Kong Montreal Cognitive Assessment Exclusion Criteria: does not fulfill any of the above criteria
Sites / Locations
- Faculty of Health and Social Sciences OF The Hong Kong Polytechnic UniversityRecruiting
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Arm 3
Sham Comparator
Experimental
Experimental
Sham Group
fNIRS Group
EEG Group
During training, participants will be asked to follow the instructions on a computer screen and complete five rounds of task. Each round starts with a 30-s rest phase followed by 4.5 min of self-regulation phase. At the rest phase, a fixed cross will appear onscreen, and participants will be instructed to sit still and relax. At the regulation phase, they will be asked to make the person smile (as an intrinsic social reward) but without tips. The intensity of smiling will be manipulated by morphing photographs of a neutral and a happy face and will represent the increase in either frontal alpha asymmetry or frontal oxyhaemoglobin asymmetry. The values at the moment will be compared against the baseline. Participants will undergo a 3-min rest period before and after each training session to track changes in resting-state brain activity. In the sham condition, participants will receive visual feedback based on pre-recordings and/or other participants' recordings.
During training, participants will be asked to follow the instructions on a computer screen and complete five rounds of task. Each round starts with a 30-s rest phase followed by 4.5 min of self-regulation phase. At the rest phase, a fixed cross will appear onscreen, and participants will be instructed to sit still and relax. At the regulation phase, they will be asked to make the person smile (as an intrinsic social reward) but without tips. The intensity of smiling will be manipulated by morphing photographs of a neutral and a happy face and will represent the increase in either frontal alpha asymmetry or frontal oxyhaemoglobin asymmetry. The values at the moment will be compared against the baseline. Participants will undergo a 3-min rest period before and after each training session to track changes in resting-state brain activity. In the fNIRS condition, participants will receive visual feedback based on their own fNIRS recordings.
During training, participants will be asked to follow the instructions on a computer screen and complete five rounds of task. Each round starts with a 30-s rest phase followed by 4.5 min of self-regulation phase. At the rest phase, a fixed cross will appear onscreen, and participants will be instructed to sit still and relax. At the regulation phase, they will be asked to make the person smile (as an intrinsic social reward) but without tips. The intensity of smiling will be manipulated by morphing photographs of a neutral and a happy face and will represent the increase in either frontal alpha asymmetry or frontal oxyhaemoglobin asymmetry. The values at the moment will be compared against the baseline. Participants will undergo a 3-min rest period before and after each training session to track changes in resting-state brain activity. In the EEG condition, participants will receive visual feedback based on their own EEG recordings.