The proposed work will evaluate the ability of neurocognitive retraining of executive functions and emotional regulation to reduce neurocognitive dysfunctions that follow trauma exposure and thereby prevent PTSD. The scientific rationale for this work is the hypothesis that impaired emotional regulation interferes with the expected recovery from the early responses to traumatic events, leading into a chronic disorder. In an initial phase the investigators will recruit 20 recently traumatized participants among trauma survivors admitted to a general hospital emergency room and test the planned intervention's acceptance and right 'dosing'. In the second phase the investigators will enroll 80 recent survivors into a randomized controlled study of the new intervention. The intervention will consist of web-based neurobehavioral training interventions that instill an emotional bias toward positive stimuli, improve emotion recognition and labeling, reduce resistance to emotional distraction, and enhance executive functioning. Control participants will complete web-based video games that do not have emotion-regulatory benefits. Outcome measures will include improvement in neurocognitive functioning and in PTSD symptoms.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
180
Neurobehavioral training will be delivered through the web, with prompting for training tasks accomplished through daily emails that include a single integrated log-in system using a customized implementation with OneLogin. All training tasks have "game-like" features making them visually engaging, and motivating. The training tasks provide immediate feedback about performance, and are specifically designed to target circuitry critical for executive functioning (EF) and emotional reactivity.
No training modules
Shaare Zedek Medical Center
Jerusalem, Israel
Amelioration of neurocognitive impairments that are associated with post-traumatic stress disorder
Impairments in emotional reactivity, emotion regulation, and executive functioning critically contribute to post-trauma psychopathology (including, but not restricted to PTSD). The primary outcome measure of this work are changes (improvements) of these functions at the immediate aftermath of treatment and six months later
Time frame: Three and nine months after a traumatic event
Post-traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) symptoms
Decrease in PTSD symptoms from trial's onset
Time frame: Three and nine months after a traumatic event
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