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Restoring Spindle and Thalamocortical Efficiency in Early-Course Schizophrenia Patients Using Auditory Stimulation
Sponsor: Fabio Ferrarelli
Summary
The purpose of this research is to identify differences in brain activity during sleep between health individuals and individuals with schizophrenia, schizophreniform, or schizoaffective disorder. This study will also investigate whether tones played during deep sleep can enhance specific features of sleep and whether enhancing such features is related to an improvement in cognitive performance.
Official title: Restoring Spindle and Thalamocortical Efficiency in Early-Course Schizophrenia Patients Using Closed-Loop Auditory Stimulation
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - 40 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
200
Start Date
2023-07-20
Completion Date
2028-06
Last Updated
2025-06-05
Healthy Volunteers
Yes
Conditions
Interventions
Closed-loop auditory stimulation
Closed-loop auditory stimulation will be administered by a wearable EEG device (Philips SmartSleep Deep Sleep Headband). The EEG device will deliver auditory stimulation when slow-wave (deep) sleep is detected. Auditory stimulation will consist of 50ms long tones separated from each other by a fixed one-second inter-tone interval. The volume of each tone will be linearly modulated by sleep-depth such that louder (or softer) tones were played during deeper (or shallower) sleep.
Sham auditory stimulation
Sham auditory stimulation consists of closed-loop auditory stimulation not being administered. A wearable EEG device (Philips SmartSleep Deep Sleep Headband) will not deliver closed-loop auditory stimulation and tones will not be played.
Locations (1)
University of Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States