Trials / Completed
CompletedNCT01518738
Attention Training
- Status
- Completed
- Phase
- N/A
- Study type
- Interventional
- Enrollment
- 94 (actual)
- Sponsor
- University of Wisconsin, Madison · Academic / Other
- Sex
- All
- Age
- 18 Years
- Healthy volunteers
- Accepted
Summary
The purpose of this study is to understand whether attention training is effective in moderating mind wandering.
Detailed description
Our subjective worlds are built from those things in our internal and external environments that capture our attention. Environments can be ambiguous with respect to which objects are most important for our attention, and the characteristics of stimuli that allow them to dominate attention are thus of great interest. Self-relevant objects, such as internally generated experience (e.g. thought), may receive substantial attention, but research on this dimension has been hampered by the difficulty of measuring such objects experimentally. The proposed study seeks to make headway in this area using several behavioral (accuracy, response time, response pattern) measures, with the hypothesis that internally generated experience will vie for attention in a way reflected by behavior. Such research will extend previous work the investigators' lab has done studying stimulus parameters that influence attention, and as a whole may present a more complete picture of how objects and attention interact to shape our worlds.
Conditions
Interventions
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| BEHAVIORAL | breath attention training | 4 week training |
| BEHAVIORAL | working memory attention training | 4 week training |
Timeline
- Start date
- 2012-02-01
- Primary completion
- 2012-11-01
- Completion
- 2012-11-01
- First posted
- 2012-01-26
- Last updated
- 2014-06-05
Locations
1 site across 1 country: United States
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01518738. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.