Models of Auditory Hallucination
Schizophrenia, Schizo Affective Disorder, Auditory Hallucination
About this trial
This is an interventional basic science trial for Schizophrenia focused on measuring TMS, Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Aged 18 - 45 years
- Voice hearing patients
- Meet diagnostic criteria for DSM-V schizophrenia or schizophreniform disorder
- Report hearing voices at least once a day
- Score > 3 on PANSS P3 (hallucinations item)
Exclusion Criteria:
- DSM-V substance use disorder within the past 6 months
- Previous head injury with neurological symptoms and/or unconsciousness
- Intellectual disability (IQ < 70)
- Non-English speaker
Contraindications for TMS, including:
- History of seizures
- Metallic implants
- Pacemaker
- Pregnancy
- Less than 6 weeks of a stable dose of psychotropic medication(s)
- Comorbid mood or anxiety diagnosis
- Clinically/behaviorally instability and unable to cooperate with TMS procedures
- Clinically significant medical condition(s)
- Unstable medical condition(s) based on EKG, medical history, physical examination, and routine lab work
- Personal history of stroke
- Family history of seizures
Sites / Locations
- Connecticut Mental Health Center (CMHC)
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Active Comparator
Active Comparator
TMS to insula
TMS to cerebellum
This study will recruit 30 clinical voice hearers (P+H+). They will complete two parallel forms of the conditioned hallucinations task (with different visual and auditory stimuli) on two occasions, separated by a week. TMS and sham will be delivered in a randomized counterbalanced order. Hypothesis: Inhibiting the insula will decrease prior over-weighting. If this computational perturbation is responsible for conditioned hallucinations, then ameliorating it with TMS that increases insula engagement will decrease conditioned hallucination responses. Furthermore, the prior weighting parameter will be reduced following active TMS compared with sham.
This study will recruit a further 70 clinical voice hearers. Again, they will complete parallel forms of the conditioned hallucinations task on two occasions, separated by a week. They will receive excitatory TMS over the cerebellum (and sham on the other occasion, in a randomized counterbalanced order). Hypotheses: Exciting the cerebellum will increase belief-updating. If poor belief-updating contributes to conditioned hallucinations, increasing cerebellum engagement should decrease conditioned hallucinations and alter the belief-updating model parameter compared with sham TMS.