Clinically significant anxiety affects up to 20% of preschool-aged children and often fails to respond to currently available treatments. Emerging science suggests that increasing brain capacity for "effortful control" (EC) may help anxious children to regulate emotion and behavior to improve outcomes. Thus, in the proposed study, children will be trained on EC tasks (including selective attention, response inhibition, etc.) to increase capacity for effortful control (EC) over fear behaviors. To determine whether EC training improves brain capacity to regulate fear, investigators will assess neurophysiological and behavioral indices of effortful control and fear reactivity before and after this training.
8.4.21 Update: In late 2020, funding for a larger version of this study was received. Although originally intended to include randomization between active EC training and a waitlist control, this original pilot study was only able to collect data for the active EC training condition. The larger study (NCT04960813) recruits children to participate in a protocol with both the original EC training and an active play-based comparison group. 4.3.20 Update: Recruitment is ongoing. Enrollment and interactions are temporarily paused due to COVID-19. This is not a suspension of IRB approval. This experiment examined child participants with clinical to subclinical anxiety to test the effects of a piloted effortful control (EC) training intervention. Up to 40 preschool age children (4-6.99 years) with clinical to subclinical anxiety symptoms were sought to complete a camp-like EC training (up to n=40). Before and after the intervention (time 1 and time 2, respectively), an EEG-based measure, the error-related negativity (ERN), was collected while children play a simple computer game. The ERN indexes neural mechanisms underlying EC. Other measures collected before and after the EC training included a blink reflex known as the fear potentiated startle (FPS); laboratory-assessed EC and fear behaviors; and, clinically assessed anxiety symptoms. Originally, the study was designed to include randomization between the EC training and a waitlist control; however, due to limited personnel and financial constraints, a decision was made to focus enrollment on the EC training. The EC intervention or "EC camp" occurred over several sessions spread across 2 or more weeks. Times were chosen to maximize child focus and energy as well as convenience for families. EC camp was comprised of short, game-like exercises that teach effortful control skills (e.g., response inhibition, selective attention, set shifting skills). As originally planned, primary analyses tested for group mean differences in ERN and FPS changes (i.e. from time 1 to time 2) among children assigned to EC training. Secondary analyses tested relationship of changes in neurophysiological targets with change in EC and Fear behaviors and change in anxiety severity. This study was designed to examine the mechanistic plausibility of a precise, neuroscientifically-derived treatment for childhood anxiety, promoting developmental trajectories towards health and away from chronic illness.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
48
An interactive, child-friendly "camp". Effortful control (EC) camp is comprised of short, game-like exercises taught by "camp counselors" to groups of approximately 4-6 children. In total, 12 different exercises that teach inhibitory and attentional control, as well as visuospatial and working memory skills, will be administered. Tasks will allow for "scaffolding" (Halperin et al, 2013), or incremental increases in difficulty of the games over time. EC camp will occur over 4 mornings from 9AM to 12PM, on two consecutive weekends.
University of Michigan
Ann Arbor, Michigan, United States
Change from Baseline Error Related Negativity (ERN) at Post-Intervention
Error-related negativity (ERN) is assessed through the "Zoo task", a "Go/No-Go" paradigm assessing effortful control. Children view a series of animals on a computer screen and are asked to press a button when a new animal appears (Go trials), unless the animal is an orangutan (i.e., inhibit button response, No-Go trials). The task includes 8 blocks, each containing 30 unique animals (Go trials) and 10 orangutans (No-Go trials) in random order. Event related potentials (ERP; direct responses to stimuli measured using electroencephalography) will be examined from fronto-central recording sites time-locked to error and correct response. Differentiation between these trial types is the primary ERN measure, but ERN in error trials will also be considered, as well as ERPs in correct trials. The number of No-Go errors and response times (RTs) to Go trials will also be considered in analyses, as performance can affect ERN amplitude.
Time frame: approximately 10 weeks
Change from Baseline Fear Potentiated Startle (FPS) at Post-Intervention
Preschool participants watch age appropriate film clips (four fearful, four neutral, and four happy clips). White noise bursts are presented at varying time points to elicit the startle eyeblink response (FPS), recorded from two electrodes under the left eye.
Time frame: approximately 10 weeks
Change in Anxiety Symptoms
Assessed using the Spence Anxiety Scale for Preschoolers (Spence, Rapee, McDonald, \& Ingram, 2001). This 34-item parent-report scale provides an overall measure of child anxiety.
Time frame: approximately 10 weeks
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