Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03688048

Effects of a Single Dose of Bright Light Treatment on Measures of Affective Information Processing

Can Non-drug Antidepressant Treatments Influence the Way the Human Brain Processes Information?

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
50 (actual)
Sponsor
University of Oxford · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 65 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

This study aims to investigate the effects of a single session of bright light treatment (BLT) on emotional information processing in healthy volunteers. We hypothesised that BLT can acutely push the processing of emotional information towards a prioritisation of positive (relative to negative) input. To test this hypothesis, healthy volunteers were randomly allocated to receive either bright light treatment or sham-placebo treatment and study participants as well as investigators were blind as to which treatment was used. After treatment, all participants underwent testing with the Oxford Emotional Test Battery, an established set of psychological tasks that allow to assess how emotional information is processed.

Detailed description

Background: Bright light treatment (BLT) is an efficacious treatment for depressive disorders but the causal mechanisms by which it exerts its clinical effects are largely unknown. According to the cognitive neuropsychological model of antidepressant treatment action, one way by which antidepressant treatments lead to clinical effects is by acutely inducing a relatively increased preferential processing of positive (as compared to negative) emotional stimuli. Whether BLT has the potential to induce such positive biases is not known to date. Aim of study: To investigate the influence of single-dose BLT on emotion-related information processing in healthy volunteers. Methods: Using a double-blind, parallel-group design, fifty healthy volunteers (male and female) were randomly allocated to a single session (60 minutes) of treatment with either bright light (10 000 lux) or a credible placebo-sham condition (deactivated negative ion generator). After treatment, all participants underwent testing with the Oxford Emotional Test Battery, an established battery of behavioural tasks that allow to assess emotional information processing in multiple cognitive domains. This battery consists of a facial expression recognition task, an emotional categorization task, an emotional dot probe task, an emotional recall task and an emotional recognition task. Before and after treatment, subjective state was assessed using different questionnaires. Hypotheses: Our working hypothesis, in line with the cognitive neuropsychological model of antidepressant treatment action, is that one-time BLT can induce biases towards positive stimuli in multiple cognitive domains and this bias will be present even in the absence of observable changes in subjective state. Implications of the study: This study will show whether a single dose of BLT can influence emotion-related information processing in a similar way as previously observed for antidepressant drugs. If this is the case, then the clinical effects of BLT could be explained through its acute effects on emotional processing. On a broader level, the results of this study will also add to our understanding of any potential effects that acute exposure to bright light (e.g. sunlight) could have on the healthy human mind.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEBright light treatment lampExposure to bright white light (1 hour, 10 000 lux)
DEVICESham negative ion generatorPlacebo treatment with deactivated negative ion generator (1 hour, audible hum, no ions emitted)

Timeline

Start date
2017-02-20
Primary completion
2018-03-16
Completion
2018-03-16
First posted
2018-09-27
Last updated
2018-10-03

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United Kingdom

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03688048. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.