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Regulation of Affect and Physiology in Depression
Sponsor: University of Southern California
Summary
Although treatments for depression are effective for many people, not everyone responds to treatment. This lack of treatment response could be due, in part, to the presence of multiple underlying causes of people's depression. This study aims to identify subtypes of depression, based on two factors: how successful people perceive themselves to be at regulating their affect in everyday life; and how much activity in the parasympathetic nervous system increases during moments when people try to regulate. The study involves ambulatory assessment of affect, regulation strategies, and physiological activity in everyday life, in a sample of young adults with remitted major depressive disorder and healthy volunteers. We will study regulation responses in the lab to further determine how subtypes differ in neural, physiological, and behavioral responses. Finally, participants will be randomly assigned to a remote, self-administered biofeedback intervention (vs. control intervention) designed to increase parasympathetic activity and physiological regulation success. While engaging in biofeedback at home for 10 days, participants will simultaneously repeat the ambulatory assessments. This design will allow us to determine the proximal impact of biofeedback on indices of regulation success in everyday life, and whether biofeedback has differential impact on regulation success for different subtypes.
Official title: Ambulatory Phenotyping With Real-Time Indices of Discordant Affect Regulation: Exploring Opportunities for Targeted Intervention in Depression
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - 27 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
252
Start Date
2024-03-22
Completion Date
2028-05-31
Last Updated
2024-05-13
Healthy Volunteers
Yes
Conditions
Interventions
Heart rate variability biofeedback
This is a Phase 2 parallel intervention design with random assignment. We will randomly assign participants to one of two biofeedback conditions. Both conditions involve completing breathing exercises at home, 30 minutes per day for 10 days, while receiving continuous feedback about parasympathetic activity from the computer.
Locations (1)
University of Southern California
Los Angeles, California, United States