Study Results
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View full resultsBasic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
163 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2018-08-27
2022-10-31
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Experimental condition: The (Growth Emotion Mindset) GEM manipulation, involves 6 components: (1) Introduction: discussion of emotional experiences in teenagers; (2) Explanation of neuroplasticity, emphasizing the potential for changes in the brain and modification of emotions during adolescence; (3) Scientific evidence for the effect of emotion regulation training on mood improvement; (4) Brief factual quizzes and written summary of key points; (5) Scenarios in which older youth describe challenging situations when they used growth mindsets to help regulate negative emotions; and (6) Self-persuasion exercise: a. Girls read a hypothetical scenario about an emotional challenge and describe their likely thoughts and feelings; b. Girls imagine the same event happening to another (younger) teen and help them understand how they can change, integrating what they learned about malleability of the brain and emotion.
Control condition: The control condition involves a structurally similar session, with the same number and type of reading and writing activities, that focuses on general education about the brain.
Social stressor. Using an adapted version of the Trier Social Stressor Test, girls will prepare a speech in which they convince a group of peers (who ostensibly will watch a video of the speech; in reality, there are no peers) that they should be selected for a fictional television show about teens' ability to form friendships. Girls face a computer screen displaying their image while preparing and presenting a speech. At intervals of 20 seconds, a female evaluator will mark a clipboard. Before and after the Trier, girls will rate several dimensions of state negative affect. After the Trier, girls will rate their use of in vivo emotion regulation strategies.
Girls will then undergo scanner training and watch a neutral video during an anatomical scan.
Emotional challenge (Social Evaluation Task). Girls will watch validated videos created for functional magnetic resonance imaging, which depict females making one of three types of statements with matching affective expression: negative social-evaluative, positive social-evaluative, or neutral. Before each video, girls will receive a prompt instructing them to imagine how they would feel if the female were a friend and if the statement was directed either toward the participant (immerse), or toward a stranger (reframe). After the cue, there will be a pause, presentation of the video, and another pause. After each trial, the participant will rate how bad they feel on a 5-point scale.
Resting state. Following the emotional challenge, girls will remain still and fixate on a central cross. Greater ability to flexibly engage and disengage emotion regulation in response to changing external challenges (imposed by negative, positive, and neutral videos) is expected to be reflected in the functional connectome for minutes beyond the emotional challenge task, resulting in more within-network connectivity in cognitive control networks as well as increased connectivity with emotion regions in girls engaged in proactive emotion regulation.
Emotional go-nogo. This task combines a cognitive control task (go-nogo) with emotion distractors depicting negative (social rejection), positive (social acceptance), or neutral (scrambled) images taken from a validated set of stimuli. Letters are presented sequentially in a small box at the center of the screen, with emotion distractors in the background. The distractors are presented alone , prior to presentation of the letter, to make it difficult to ignore the emotional content. Girls are instructed to ignore the images and respond as quickly as possible without sacrificing accuracy with a button press to every letter (go trials), except for Xs (no-go; 25 percent of trials). Girls acquire a prepotent tendency to press and must inhibit their responses during X trials.
Edited June 2020:
Anticipated 75% and 100% enrollment dates as well as primary and final study completion dates and primary endpoint analyses and reporting of results were changed due to recruitment and data collection obstacles posed by the coronavirus pandemic. The new dates were estimated based on the assumption that some recruitment and data collection will resume in the fall of 2020. If this is not possible or if families are reluctant to complete sessions, completion dates may need to be changed again at a later date.
Edited November 2021:
Although the 75% enrollment was reached, anticipated 100% enrollment date as well as primary and final study completion dates and primary endpoint analyses and reporting of results were changed due to ongoing recruitment and data collection obstacles posed by the coronavirus pandemic. Although a small amount of recruitment and data collection resumed fall of 2020-fall of 2021, obstacles still remain due to school and family reluctance to participate in research.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
BASIC_SCIENCE
DOUBLE
Study Groups
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Growth Mindset
Persuasive education about emotions, brain development, and teenagers' ability to learn how to manage emotions
Growth Mindset
Growth emotion mindset induction
Brain Education
Neutral education about functions of different parts of the brain
Brain Education
Brain education
Interventions
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Growth Mindset
Growth emotion mindset induction
Brain Education
Brain education
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Over-sample (approximately 1/3 of sample) for score \>= .75 standard deviation (SD) on a screening measure of fixed mindset about emotion
* English-speaking
* Ability to independently complete tasks and measures
Exclusion Criteria
* Possible metal fragments in the eyes or other parts of body
* Pacemaker
* A history of claustrophobia
* Braces
* Weighing over 250 pounds
* Pregnancy or possibility of being pregnant
* Severe medical conditions (e.g., blind or deaf, head trauma)
* Learning disability or other condition that interferes with ability to complete tasks
13 Years
18 Years
FEMALE
No
Sponsors
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Auburn University
OTHER
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD)
NIH
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Karen D Rudolph, PhD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
University of Illinois, Urbana Champaign
Locations
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University of Illinois
Champaign, Illinois, United States
Countries
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Provided Documents
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Document Type: Study Protocol
Document Type: Statistical Analysis Plan
Document Type: Informed Consent Form: Parent Consent Form
Document Type: Informed Consent Form: Child Assent Form
Other Identifiers
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18021
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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