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Clinical Research Directory

Browse clinical research sites, groups, and studies.

21 clinical studies listed.

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Memory

Tundra lists 21 Memory clinical trials. Each listing includes eligibility criteria, study locations, and direct links to research sites in the Tundra directory.

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NOT YET RECRUITING

NCT07461584

Memory Enhancement in Aging With Optimal Dosing

This project optimizes high-resolution tACS to improve memory in healthy older adults, advancing drug-free approaches for ADRD. We test stimulation schedules and develop an adaptive, brain-guided tACS system to strengthen memory-supporting networks.

Gender: All

Ages: 65 Years - Any

Updated: 2026-04-07

Aging
Noninvasive Brain Stimulation
Memory
ENROLLING BY INVITATION

NCT06628193

Study of Low-intensity Focused Ultrasound Effects on Human Memory

This research project is examining the effects of noninvasive brain stimulation on human memory. This study will help to better understand noninvasive brain stimulation techniques that may have the potential to aid in memory dysfunction. Subjects will undergo a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and a computed tomography (CT) scan, to take pictures of their brain and skull. They will receive noninvasive brain stimulation using low-intensity focused ultrasound (LIFU) sound waves, to temporarily change brain activity. Their brain signals (MRI or EEG) will be monitored to measure changes in their brain signals. Their heart rate, blood pressure, respiratory rate, eye movement and skin moisture will be monitored as well. They will complete neuropsychological batteries and memory tasks. They will complete questionnaires.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - 65 Years

Updated: 2026-03-31

1 state

Memory
RECRUITING

NCT07468279

Synchronization of Theta to Influence Memory

This study aims to clarify relations between brain oscillations and two cognitive functions: cognitive control and memory.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - 59 Years

Updated: 2026-03-17

1 state

Cognitive Control
Memory
NOT YET RECRUITING

NCT07477028

Non-Invasive Detection and Preservation of Neurocognitive Signals in the Peri-Death Period Using Brain-Computer Interface and Artificial Intelligence

Background: Recent electroencephalography (EEG) data indicate that the transition from clinical death to cellular death is marked by highly organized neurophysiological events, including significant surges in gamma-band power, cross-frequency coupling, and distinct spreading depolarization waves. This prospective, observational feasibility study utilizes rapid-deployment, high-density, noninvasive BCI hardware paired with proprietary AI analytics to detect, classify, and securely archive these terminal neurocognitive signals. Objectives: (1) Quantify transient gamma-band activity and cross-frequency connectivity post-clinical death; (2) Validate the efficacy of machine learning models for real-time signal classification in high-noise clinical environments; (3) Establish a highly secure, encrypted bio-informational archive of peri-life EEG data. Design: Prospective, open-label, multicenter, observational cohort (n\>20).

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2026-03-17

Terminal Illness
End-of-Life Care
Death
+11
RECRUITING

NCT07466290

L-serine and Strength Training in the Elderly

This study investigates whether taking the amino acid L-serine, either alone or in combination with targeted strength training, can have a positive effect on mental performance, brain function, and physical fitness in older people. Healthy, independent women and men aged 65 to 85 are eligible to participate. Participants will be randomly assigned to one of three groups: placebo, L-serine, or L-serine combined with strength training. Cognitive tests, physical performance tests, and blood and brain tests will be conducted over a period of 48 weeks. The aim is to gain a better understanding of how nutrition and exercise can contribute to healthy aging.

Gender: All

Ages: 65 Years - 85 Years

Updated: 2026-03-12

1 state

Brain Health
Longevity
Cognitive Performance
+6
RECRUITING

NCT06551090

Prediction of Anxiety and Memory State

The purpose of this study is to look at how signals in the brain, body, and behavior relate to anxiety and memory function. This project seeks to develop the CAMERA (Context-Aware Multimodal Ecological Research and Assessment) platform, a state-of-the-art open multimodal hardware/software system for measuring human brain-behavior relationships. The R61 portion of the project is designed to develop the CAMERA platform, which will use multimodal, passive sensor data to predict anxiety-memory state in patients undergoing inpatient monitoring with intracranial electrodes for clinical epilepsy, as well as to build CAMERA's passive data framework and active data framework.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - 55 Years

Updated: 2026-01-28

1 state

Anxiety
Memory
Epilepsy
RECRUITING

NCT07304375

Effects of Exercise and Sleep on Motor Learning and Functional Abilities in Multiple Sclerosis

The ExSiMS study is a randomized, controlled crossover study including 20 individuals (18-70 years) diagnosed with relapsing remitting Multiple Sclerosis (MS) This project investigates, through behavioral and neurophysiological measurements, how aerobic exercise on an ergometer bike and sleep in the form of a nap and overnight sleep may enhance cortical motor skill learning evaluated by a complex hand motor skill test and thereby improve functional capacity in individuals with MS. Beyond the effect on motor skill learning, the project investigate the effect on electroencephalography (EEG) - electromyography (EMG) coherence. The study hypothesizes that individuals with neurological conditions, such as multiple sclerosis (MS), may experience beneficial effects on specific motor rehabilitation through systematically planned cardiovascular exercise and sleep scheduling, due to positive impacts on memory consolidation. Aims: * Investigate the brain's neurophysiological responses and memory effects following a training intervention and, separately, sleep, in the form of a power nap, in individuals with MS. * Examine whether these effects persist beyond the few days previously observed in healthy individuals by implementing a longer-term intervention. * Explore whether the training effect is influenced by disease activity in the brain, such as during relapses and during immunosuppressive treatment. * Assess whether the presence of abnormally reduced cognitive endurance (fatigue) affects the impact of the intervention involving exercise and sleep. The study is based on documented positive effects of physical activity and sleep in both young and older adults, as well as in individuals recovering from stroke. The research thus offers promising perspectives for broader applications within neurorehabilitation, and particularly for MS, as the disease is associated with functional impairments. At the same time, both physical exercise and sleep represent meaningful interventions that should be thoughtfully integrated into rehabilitation strategies.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - 70 Years

Updated: 2026-01-08

Exercise
Sleep
Motor Learning
+2
NOT YET RECRUITING

NCT07251985

Cognitive Effects of Bioavailable Curcumin

An estimated 50% of older adults complain of memory changes that worsen as they age. Although numerous commercially available dietary supplements claim cognitive benefits, relatively few well-designed, longitudinal, placebo-controlled studies have rigorously evaluated their effects on cognitive performance. In a previous double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled, 18-month clinical trial in middle-aged and older non-demented adults, the investigators found that a bioavailable form of curcumin taken orally twice a day showed greater gains on specific measures of memory and attention relative to placebo. Although the investigators found significant between-group curcumin/placebo differences with moderate effect sizes, the sample size (n=40) was small. The present adequately powered, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study will evaluate the effect of daily consumption of bioavailable curcumin on measurable changes in cognitive performance in non-demented middle-aged and older adults.

Gender: All

Ages: 50 Years - 85 Years

Updated: 2025-11-26

Memory
Cognitive Function Decline
RECRUITING

NCT06986122

Virtual Contexts for Affective Modulation

This study investigates how spatial context and perceived controllability modulate pain, affective states such as anxiety, and motivated behavior. The study examines how control over pain and threat-related environments influences pain perception, state anxiety, associated autonomic responses, and behavior. The main questions it aims to answer are: Does having control over pain within specific contexts alter how much pain people feel-even when the stimulus intensity remains constant? How do different types of environments (safe, controllable, or uncontrollable) shape pain-related brain activity, subjective anxiety, and physiological arousal? How do people perform cognitively demanding or distracting tasks (and retain their memory) when under threat versus when in control? Lastly, how do these learned associations with spatial contexts persist or adapt when environmental contingencies are explicitly changed? Taken together, exploration of these factors may lay the groundwork for understanding how placebo-related mechanisms-including perceived control, contextual learning, emotional engagement, and distraction-interact to shape pain and anxiety in complex environments.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - 55 Years

Updated: 2025-10-31

1 state

Pain Control
Anxiety
Memory
RECRUITING

NCT07208279

Cognitive Vitality Pilot Study

This study's purpose is to evaluate the effects of a dietary supplement on cognitive function and psychological well-being in community-dwelling older adults aged 55+. The study involves taking a commercially available dietary supplement daily for 45 days. A 45-minute assessment will be conducted at the beginning and again at the end of the study.

Gender: All

Ages: 55 Years - Any

Updated: 2025-10-28

1 state

Aging
Healthy Aging
Cognition
+2
ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING

NCT04392908

Communication Memory of Cancer Diagnosis Within the Pediatric Triangle

Present project aims to investigate memories related to a cancer communication diagnosis in pediatric oncology. It evaluates possible common elements and specificity between family and healthcare staff.

Gender: All

Ages: 12 Years - Any

Updated: 2025-09-26

1 state

Memory
RECRUITING

NCT04694534

Remediation Program Via a "Serious Game" for the Cognitive Functions of Multiple Sclerosis Patients

The main goal of this study is to assess the effectiveness of a cognitive remediation program based on a "serious game" on the information processing speed evolution and the process of learning via episodic memory in multiple sclerosis patients.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - 65 Years

Updated: 2025-09-04

3 states

Multiple Sclerosis
Memory
Learning
RECRUITING

NCT05929898

MRI Neurofeedback and Brain Circuits Related to Motivation in Healthy Participants

The purpose of this research study is to understand how healthy individuals self-regulate motivation by observing brain activity using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - 45 Years

Updated: 2025-08-22

1 state

Motivation
Memory
Self-regulation
ENROLLING BY INVITATION

NCT05945628

Basic Experimental Study of Hippocampal Memory Functions

This project tests the role of the human hippocampus in providing online representation of episodic content and providing the top-down signals to brain networks for visuospatial attention and visual processing needed to drive visual sampling for the formation of coherent episodic memories. This hypothesis will be tested in several experiments that measure and manipulate hippocampal activity within eye-tracking tasks designed to isolate the interplay between memory and visual sampling during memory formation. These experiments will be performed in individuals with epilepsy undergoing neurosurgical procedures as part of clinical care, as this provides invasive recordings of neural activity (intracranial electroencephalography, or "iEEG") from the hippocampus and other regions of interest with temporal resolution that matches the rapid pace of eye movements. The temporal resolution of iEEG is key to addressing the hypotheses concerning how the hippocampus drives visual sampling, in addition to responding to it. Direct electrical stimulation through the iEEG electrodes will also be used to test the necessary role of hippocampal processing in driving active visual sampling. By rigorously testing the role of hippocampus in interaction with large-scale networks during the process of memory formation that occurs via active sampling, this project aims to better understand mechanisms relevant to the disruptions of memory formation that occur in neurological and psychiatric disorders.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - 45 Years

Updated: 2025-07-08

1 state

Memory
RECRUITING

NCT05541887

Use Muscadine Wine Nutraceuticals to Improve Brain Health, Cognition, and Mental Health

Previous studies have shown that polyphenol-rich foods can positively affect cognitive functions, memory, and mood in humans. We hypothesize that both acute and chronic intake of muscadine wine polyphenols will improve cognitive performance and mood through regulating the HPA axis, alleviating inflammation and oxidative stress, and/or inhibiting monoamine oxidase activities

Gender: All

Ages: 50 Years - 65 Years

Updated: 2025-06-12

1 state

Cognitive Performance
Memory
Mood
+1
RECRUITING

NCT06351098

Longitudinal Investigation of Sleep, Memory, and Brain Development Across the Nap Transition

To examine the relations between sleep (nap transitions, sleep physiology), memory, and brain development longitudinally, the researchers will assess n=180 children (in order to acquire n=152 usable data sets) who are 36-54 months of age and habitual nappers at enrollment. In each wave, the researchers will assess memory, memory change over a nap and equivalent waking interval, sleep physiology of the nap, and brain structure and function (using Magnetic Resonance Imagining or MRI). Additionally, overnight sleep physiology will be assessed in all participants. Waves will take place approximately every 6 months. For all children, three waves will be collected. With these data, the researchers will address the following aims: * Examine neural markers that predict the sleep transition (Aim 1); * Examine changes in sleep-dependent memory processing (mnemonic discrimination) over both nap and overnight sleep intervals, across the sleep transition (Aim 2); * Examine changes in sleep microstructure in both nap and overnight sleep across the sleep transition (Aim 3) * Examine interrelations among brain, memory and sleep microstructure across the sleep transition (Aim 4)

Gender: All

Ages: 36 Months - 60 Months

Updated: 2025-04-04

2 states

Memory
NOT YET RECRUITING

NCT06902753

Adaptation and Normalization of a Verbal Episodic Memory Test in French Sign Language

To date, neuropsychological assessment of deaf signing persons is complicated by a lack of resources, especially the absence of tools available in French Sign Language (LSF). This is due to perceptual and cultural differences, and in particular the linguistic differences between French and LSF. This lack of resources significantly hinders access to care for deaf patients, as neuropsychological assessment is often a key clinical criterion in the diagnosis of certain neurological pathologies (Alzheimer's disease in particular) and enables coherent care plans to be drawn up, for example in the aftermath of strokes or traumatic brain injuries. In particular, episodic memory (which refers to the ability to memorise information anchored in a specific context) is a cognitive domain that is sensitive to pathologies such as Alzheimer's disease, but it is not currently possible to assess it with deaf signing patients. The aim of this study is to create a memory assessment test adapted to a deaf population that expresses in LSF and to normalize this test on this same population. The aim is to provide a diagnosis assessment tool, which currently does not exist in France, to improve access to care for deaf people. This project could then be extended to the creation of tests for other cognitive domains (executive functions, attention, social cognition, etc.) and to prospects for cognitive remediation. The 16-item Free and Cued Recall test (RL-RI 16) is the best choice because it is easy to use and accurate enough to assess each stage of episodic memory. These qualities make it a decisive tool in certain differential diagnosis. In order to select the most relevant signs, lexical lists by frequency in LSF will be drawn up during a preliminary phase, during which the participants will have to give, in one minute, the maximum number of signs belonging to different categories (animals, vegetables, clothes...). These lists will be used to select the most relevant signs according to their frequency (neither too common nor too rare), based on the same principle as RL-RI 16. It will then be standardised on deaf adults, for whom LSF is the main language, with no cognitive impairment, across France, via the various Deaf Care Units, with the help of French / LSF interpreters. Working with different centers in France will make it possible to recruit a larger and more representative number of participants, and to be more sensitive to any regional effects.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - Any

Updated: 2025-03-30

Neuropsychological Tests
Memory
Alzheimer Disease
+3
RECRUITING

NCT06889961

Effect of Daily Mixed Spice Consumption on Memory Function

The aging process entails a multitude of structural and functional alterations within the brain, culminating in a gradual and progressive decline in cognitive function. Recent research has indicated that various spices may hold the key to enhancing brain health and combating the effects of aging on cognitive abilities. The hypothesis is that a mixture of spices, acknowledged for their reported memory protection potential, may yield a more potent beneficial effect on memory function than a single spice. The spice mixture will be used at culinary dose, and therefore side effects are anticipated. In this study, the effects of spice mixture will be evaluated, as well as their anti-oxidant, and anti-inflammatory properties. The proposed pilot study will include 50 adults (ages 50-80), exhibiting typical age-related mild cognitive decline, excluding dementia or major neurocognitive disorders. They will be randomized 1:1 assigned into a daily intake of either 4.00 g spice mixture capsules or 4.00 g maltodextrin capsules over 3 months, and explore the sustainable effect over 3 additional months. The changes in symptoms of cognition, fatigue, and mood symptoms of the spice group vs. placebo group will be compared. The outcome of the investigation of the effects of mixed spice consumption will provide important novel information on dietary recommendation of spice to preserve cognitive function in aging population.

Gender: All

Ages: 50 Years - 80 Years

Updated: 2025-03-21

1 state

Memory
Cognitive Function
RECRUITING

NCT05771844

Home Sleep Therapy for Older Adults With MCI

The goal of this clinical trial is to learn about the ability of non-invasive brain stimulation during sleep to enhance people's deep sleep and its potential benefit on memory in people with mild cognitive impairment via home use sleep therapy device (SleepWISP) as well as learn about biomarkers associated with Alzheimer disease (AD). The clinical trial aims to answer the following main questions: 1. Whether the non-invasive transcranial electrical stimulation (TES) delivered by SleepWISP could provide short-term enhancement of deep sleep in a single night in the target population. 2. Whether TES delivered by SleepWISP could enhance deep sleep over multiple nights in the target population. 3. Whether enhance on deep sleep could improve memory performance in the target population. Participants will be asked to wear non-invasive and painless devices that record their brain activity during sleep along with an actigraphy watch that measures their movement throughout the day. In addition, blood samples or nasal swab assays will be collected from participants multiple times during the study.

Gender: All

Ages: 40 Years - 85 Years

Updated: 2025-02-17

2 states

Mild Cognitive Impairment
Sleep
Transcranial Electrical Stimulation
+2
RECRUITING

NCT06669585

Cannabis Observations on Brain Waves, Retrieval, and Attention: Experiment 3

This study investigates the impact of ∆9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and cannabidiol (CBD) on recognition memory in healthy, regular cannabis users. Participants complete the same recognition memory task after self-administering one of two different strains of cannabis flower one day and while not intoxicated another day. Event-related potentials (ERPs) are measured via electroencephalogram (EEG) during the recognition memory task. Blood is collected to quantify THC and CBD exposure. Participants also complete self-report measures of medical history, sleep quality, subjective cognitive function, physical activity, psychological functioning, substance use, and acute drug effects.

Gender: All

Ages: 21 Years - 40 Years

Updated: 2024-12-09

1 state

Cannabis
Memory
Electroencephalography
ENROLLING BY INVITATION

NCT05892419

Electrophysiological Signatures of Distinct Working Memory Subprocesses That Predict Long-term Memory Success

Healthy young adults will view pictures of items while the investigators record electroencephalogram (EEG) brain activity. Then, the investigators will ask the participants to report which items the participants remember seeing. The investigators will examine how the measured brain activity relates to which pictures the participants remember.

Gender: All

Ages: 18 Years - 35 Years

Updated: 2023-06-09

1 state

Memory
EEG