Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03882957

Trial on the Effect of Media Multi-tasking on Attention to Food Cues and Cued Overeating

Media Multi-tasking and Cued Overeating: Assessing the Pathway and Piloting an Intervention Using an Attentional Network Framework

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
92 (actual)
Sponsor
Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
13 Years – 17 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Childhood obesity is a critical public health problem in the United States. One factor known to contribute to childhood obesity is excess consumption. Importantly, excess consumption related to weight gain is not necessarily driven by hunger. For example, environmental food cues stimulate brain reward regions and lead to overeating even after a child has eaten to satiety. This type of cued eating is associated with increased attention to food cues; the amount of time a child spends looking at food cues (e.g., food advertisements) is associated with increased caloric intake. However, individual susceptibility to environmental food cues remains unknown. It is proposed that the prevalent practice of media multi-tasking-simultaneously attending to multiple electronic media sources-increases attention to peripheral food cues in the environment and thereby plays an important role in the development of obesity. It is hypothesized that multi-tasking teaches children to engage in constant task switching that makes them more responsive to peripheral cues, many of which are potentially harmful (such as those that promote overeating). The overarching hypothesis is that media multi-tasking alters the attentional networks of the brain that control attention to environmental cues. High media multi-tasking children are therefore particularly susceptible to food cues, thereby leading to increased cued eating. It is also predicted that attention modification training can provide a protective effect against detrimental attentional processing caused multi-tasking, by increasing the proficiency of the attention networks. These hypotheses will be tested by assessing the pathway between media-multitasking, attention to food cues, and cued eating. It will also be examined whether it is possible to intervene on this pathway by piloting an at-home attention modification training intervention designed to reduce attention to food cues. It is our belief that this research will lead to the development of low-cost, scalable tools that can train attention networks so that children are less influenced by peripheral food cues, a known cause of overeating. For example, having children practice attention modification intervention tasks regularly (which could be accomplished through user-friendly computer games or cell phone/tablet apps) might offset the negative attentional effects of media multi-tasking.

Detailed description

\[3/14/2020\]: Study recruitment temporarily halted due to the COVID-19 pandemic

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALSustained attentionparticipants will complete a sustained attention task
BEHAVIORALmedia multi-taskparticipants will complete multiple media tasks at the same time
OTHERVideoparticipants will watch a video of media tasks being completed

Timeline

Start date
2019-06-05
Primary completion
2020-03-12
Completion
2020-03-12
First posted
2019-03-20
Last updated
2022-06-14
Results posted
2022-06-14

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03882957. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.