When individuals experience depression, they may find that their brain does not work in the same way that they are used to. For example, sometimes the ability to remember things that happened during the day is not so good. This might specifically impact positive memories, for example remembering having fun at the ice cream shop with some friends. This is because when individuals are depressed they sometimes can not remember positive experiences as our brains do not have the chemicals needed to store those memories. In this experiment the investigators want to see if the ability to remember positive information is negatively impacted by depression. To do so, participants will look at some images that are related to winning high vs. low rewards. Next they are tested on their memory for those images. Participants will also be asked some questions about themselves and their mental health. The investigators expect that those who are experiencing depression will be less able to remember images related to higher rewards compared to those who are not experiencing depression.
Sleep, at its basis, is known to be an important factor for mental health outcomes, yet the contribution of sleep dependent memory consolidation to those outcomes is poorly understood. In depression, learning and memory consolidation is often impaired and this may have long-term consequences that are driven by poor sleep, for those diagnosed with a depressive disorder. Indeed, depressed patients also have impairments in sleep specific physiological activity, which are crucial for efficient memory consolidation whereby memories are reactivated for long-term storage (e.g., slow-wave-sleep). This may contribute to depression symptoms such as anhedonia, a loss of interest in pleasurable activities, which in one study has been related to reduced ability to remember rewarding experiences and reduced activity in reward-related brain networks (e.g., ventral striatum). In order to understand the complex relationship between, sleep, depression and reward it is first necessary to establish a reliable effect size for the relationship between depression and reward-related memory consolidation. Indeed, in recent years it has been found that many published studies lack statistical power to reliably establish robust effect sizes due to small sample size. Therefore, in this experiment the investigators will examine the impact of depression on reward related memory consolidation with a large sample to yield a reliable estimate of the effect size. All participants will undergo the motivated learning task and will have their memory tested for reward related images before and after a 24-hour retention interval. Based on previous research the investigators predict the following: H1: Memory for images associated with high reward will be greater compared to memory for images associated with low reward. H3: Healthy controls will have higher memory performance compared to depressed patients. H2: The magnitude of the benefit for high reward on memory will be greater for healthy controls compared to depressed patients. Sample Size: The investigators determined the sample size by performing a data simulation. They achieved this by simulating effects which are in line with our hypotheses using a linear mixed effects model. That data simulation indicated that 400 participants in total would be required to detect the effects of interest with 95% power. If participants have missing data, then that data will be recollected until the desired sample is achieved. Procedure All participants will complete the following procedure online via their choice of browser and computer over two sessions. In the first session participants will first sign the consent form then complete the Becks Depression Inventory (BDI) to determine their mental health status. Once complete participants will provide their demographic information (age, sex, gender, education, etc.), complete the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT), the Generalised Anxiety Disorder - 7 (GAD-7), Snaith-Hamilton Pleasure Scale (SHAPS), Stanford Sleepiness Scale (SSS) and lastly the Psychomotor Vigilance Task (PVT). Then participants begin the first part of the Motivated Learning Task, the study phase. After a 24-hour retention interval, participants complete the SSS and PVT a second time then complete the test phase of the Motivated Learning Task. Following the conclusion of the test phase, participants are debriefed. Analysis Plan: The investigators will use a linear mixed effects models with maximal effects structures to answer the hypotheses. In this case the maximal structure will be used as not including all slopes, intercepts, and correlation structures can increase false positive rates. However, it is also possible that such a model may not converge due to this. Therefore, if necessary, parameters will be removed iteratively starting with correlations of random slopes and then the random slopes themselves. To examine the hypotheses (H1, H2 and H3) the following linear mixed effects model will be used and reduced accordingly for the reasons specified above: d' \~ reward \* depression + (reward \* depression\| participant) Although there will be a positive effect of reward on memory sensitivity in both depressed participants and healthy controls, the investigators expect that this effect will be more pronounced in the latter.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
400
The Motivated Learning Task is split into two parts, the learning phase, and the test phase. During the learning phase participants are presented with 72 landscape images (targets) which they must memorise. Each image which participants are shown is associated with a reward amount. During the test phase participants are shown the 72 images they saw during the learning phase, known as targets, intermixed with 72 new images they did not see during the learning phase, known as lures. Participants must decide whether the image is "old" (i.e., they saw it during the learning phase) or "new" (i.e. they did not see it during the learning phase). After they have made their old/new decision, participants rate their confidence in their decision on a 3-point scale (i.e., guess, sure, very sure).
Central Institute of Mental Health
Mannheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany
Discriminability, d'
Discriminability refers to the ability of a participant to distinguish between targets, i.e., images that were presented to them, and lures, i.e., images that were not shown to them. This is calculated using the following formula: z("hit rate" )-z("false alarm rate") and will be calculated for each reward category.
Time frame: immediately after the procedure
Hit Rate
The hit rate refers to the number of hits (i.e., correct "old" responses to target images) divided by the number of target trials. The hit rate will be calculated for every reward category.
Time frame: immediately after the procedure
False Alarm Rate
The false alarm rate, the number of false alarms (i.e., incorrect "old" responses to lure images)/the number of lure trials. The false alarm rate will be calculated for every reward category
Time frame: immediately after the procedure
Criterion, C
Criterion refers to a participants willingness to say "old" irrespective of whether or not they actually saw the image. Criterion is calculate using the following formula: (- z("hit rate" )+ z("false alarm rate" )) / 2 and will be calculated for every reward category.
Time frame: immediately after the procedure
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