In this study, the investigators will recruit young adults (ages 18-25 years) with elevated anxiety/depression symptoms and sleep disturbance. Participants will complete two overnights in a sleep lab. During one of the overnights, slow-wave activity will be enhanced by delivering sub-arousal auditory tones during slow-wave sleep using a headband device (Philips SmartSleep or Dreem 2). During the other overnight, tones will not be administered. Cognitive and emotional processes will be evaluated using behavioral task performance, self-report, and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). After the second overnight, participants will take the headband device home and wear it every night for approximately 2 weeks. For half of the participants, the headband will play tones every night and, for the other half, the headband will not play tones. Participants will then return for a final testing visit in which cognitive and emotional processes and anxiety/depression symptoms will be assessed using behavioral task performance and self-report.
When interested participants are identified through recruitment methods, they will be directed to complete an online screening survey. The aim of this screening is to ensure that participants meet minimal study inclusion/exclusion criteria and to avoid an unnecessary in-person visit to the lab. Based on the online screening, eligible participants will be contacted by study personnel for scheduling for the in-lab baseline visit. During the baseline visit, informed consent will be obtained. The investigators will also perform additional screening, a hearing test, and an audio recording of the participant singing in preparation for the karaoke task (described below). Finally, participants will be given a wrist actigraphy device and will be sent a daily electronic sleep diary with which to track their sleep at home for approximately 1-week before each overnight session. Participants will be told to maintain a consistent sleep schedule (+/- 1hr around wake and bedtimes) for one week before each overnight. Sleep diary and actigraphy will be used to verify compliance. Participants will also be asked to refrain from alcohol and recreational drug use for 48hrs before each in-lab overnight session and will be asked to refrain from consuming caffeine after Noon on the day of their overnight visits. Participants will also be asked to wear the headband device for one night at home prior to each overnight visit to get acclimated to the feel. Approximately 1-2 weeks later, participants will return for their first overnight visit. They will be screened for drug/alcohol use through a subjective questionnaire. Prior to sleep, participants will complete a set of tasks and questionnaires assessing mood, sleepiness, cognition, and emotional processing. The primary tasks will include a modified AX-CPT cognitive control task and a karaoke task. After completing these tasks, participants will be randomized in counterbalanced order to receive acoustic stimulation during sleep (STIM) or a control night with no acoustic stimulation (SHAM). Participants will remain blind to condition. During STIM, participants will wear a headband device (Philips SmartSleep or Dreem 2), which presents sub-arousal tones during slow-wave sleep to boost underlying slow-wave activity. During SHAM, participants will wear the same device, but no tones will be administered. During both nights, participants will also be set up with standard polysomnography to objectively assess sleep and slow-wave activity. Post-sleep, participants will again complete a set of tasks and questionnaires assessing mood, sleepiness, cognition, and emotional processing. The primary tasks will include a modified AX-CPT task, an International Affective Picture Stimuli (IAPS) task, and the Karaoke task which will be competed in an fMRI scanner. After a 1-2-week washout period at home, participants will return for their second overnight session to complete the other experimental condition. For at least one week before the second overnight, participants will maintain a consistent sleep schedule (+/- 1hr around wake and bedtimes), verified with wrist actigraphy and sleep diary. Participants will again be asked to refrain from alcohol and recreational drugs use for 48hrs before the overnight session and will be asked to refrain from consuming caffeine after Noon on the day of their overnight visit. Participants will again be asked to wear the headband device at home for one night prior to their overnight visit. After completing the second overnight session, participants will take a headband device home and wear it each night for approximately 2 weeks. Participants will be asked to maintain a consistent sleep schedule (+/- 1hr around wake and bedtimes). Half of the participants will be randomly assigned to receive tones each night (Stim2) and half will not (Sham2). Participant will be blind to condition. Participants will complete daily assessments of their mood, anxiety/depression symptoms, and sleep quality. After the \~2 weeks at home, participants will return for a final testing visit. Participants will complete assessments of their mood, anxiety/depression symptoms, cognition, and emotional processing. Below is a description of the primary tasks: AX-CPT task: participants view cue-probe pairings, displayed as two letters presented one at a time on a computer screen. The first letter is the cue and the second letter is the probe. Participants are instructed to press a button when they encounter the valid cue-probe pairing and a different button for non-valid cue-probe pairings. IAPS task: participants will be presented with neutral and negative images from the International Affective Picture System. Participants may be asked to rate their affect, valence, and arousal after each image. Karaoke task: this task is intended to assess emotional processes, particularly self-referential emotions (i.e., shame, embarrassment). During the baseline visit, participants will sing while being audio recorded. Participants may be asked to wear headphones, which will present the song audio, but will mask their own singing, to promote out-of-tune singing. During the overnight visits, participants will listen to audio snips of their own singing and the same song sung by a professional singer. Participants will rate the intensity of different emotions.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
BASIC_SCIENCE
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
40
During the in-lab overnight, a headband device will be used to administer acoustic stimulation. Tones will be played during slow-wave sleep to enhance underlying slow-wave activity (0.5 - 4 Hz delta spectral power).
During the in-lab overnight, the participant will wear a headband device, but the device will not administer acoustic stimulation. The device will be on and will still monitor sleep, but will not play tones.
During the \~2 weeks at home, a headband device will be used to administer acoustic stimulation. Tones will be played during slow-wave sleep to enhance underlying slow-wave activity (0.5 - 4 Hz delta spectral power).
During the \~2 weeks at home, the participant will wear a headband device, but the device will not administer acoustic stimulation. The device will be on and will still monitor sleep, but will not play tones.
University of Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States
RECRUITINGAcute change in slow-wave activity
Change in 0.5 - 4 Hz delta spectral power
Time frame: Change between two nights, one night in the Sham condition and one night in the Stim condition, separated by ~1-2 weeks
Slow-wave activity (chronic change)
0.5 - 4 Hz delta spectral power
Time frame: Assessed daily during the ~2 weeks at home
Change in top-down attention d'
Change in the standardized hit rate for AX trials minus the standardized false alarm rate to AY trials on the modified AX-CPT task
Time frame: Change between three days; one following a night in the Sham condition, one following a night in the Stim condition, and one following either the Sham2 or Stim2 condition; with ~1-2 weeks between each condition
Change in cognitive flexibility d'
Change in the standardized hit rate for BY trials minus the standardized false alarm rate to AX trials on the modified AX-CPT task
Time frame: Change between three days; one following a night in the Sham condition, one following a night in the Stim condition, and one following either the Sham2 or Stim2 condition; with ~1-2 weeks between each condition
Change in frontoparietal cognitive control circuit activity
Change in fMRI activity in the frontoparietal cognitive control circuit activity (e.g., dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, inferior parietal lobule, middle cingulate gyrus, precuneus) for the AX v. AY contrast during the modified AX-CPT task
Time frame: Change between two days, one following a night in the Sham condition and one following a night in the Stim condition, separated by ~1-2 weeks
Change in frontoparietal cognitive control circuit activity
Change in fMRI activity in the frontoparietal cognitive control circuit activity (e.g., dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, inferior parietal lobule, middle cingulate gyrus, precuneus) for the BY v. AX contrast during the modified AX-CPT task
Time frame: Change between two days, one following a night in the Sham condition and one following a night in the Stim condition, separated by ~1-2 weeks
Change in negative affect
Change in average self-reported negative affect using Likert-style scales during the International Affective Picture Stimuli task. Scales will range from 1-100, with higher scores representing more negative affect.
Time frame: Change between three days; one following a night in the Sham condition, one following a night in the Stim condition, and one following either the Sham2 or Stim2 condition; with ~1-2 weeks between each condition
Change in frontolimbic emotional reactivity circuit activity
Change in fMRI activity in the frontolimbic emotional reactivity circuit activity for the negative v. neutral image contrast during the International Affective Picture Stimuli task
Time frame: Change between two days, one following a night in the Sham condition and one following a night in the Stim condition, separated by ~1-2 weeks
Change in anxiety symptoms
Change in self-reported anxiety using the PROMIS anxiety scale (T-scores range from 36.3-82.7, with higher scores indicating worse anxiety symptoms)
Time frame: Change between four days; the screening visit, one following a night in the Sham condition, one following a night in the Stim condition, and one following either the Sham2 or Stim2 condition; with ~1-2 weeks between each
Change in depression symptoms
Change in self-reported depression using the PROMIS depression scale (T-scores range from 37.1-81.1, with higher scores indicating worse depression symptoms)
Time frame: Change between four days; the screening visit, one following a night in the Sham condition, one following a night in the Stim condition, and one following either the Sham2 or Stim2 condition; with ~1-2 weeks between each
Change in mood
Change in self-reported mood on the Daytime Insomnia Symptom Scale. All 20 subscales will be assessed and each subscale score ranges from 1-100, with higher scores indicating more of that mood (i.e., alert, sad, tense, effort, happy, weary, calm, sleep, overall mood, clear-headed, fatigued, anxious, exhausted, relaxed, forgetful, efficient, stressed, energetic, irritable, ability to concentrate).
Time frame: Change across the ~2 weeks at home
Change in anxiety/depression symptoms
Change in self-reported anxiety and depression using the Anxiety and Depression Scale (Both subscales will be assessed. Scores on each subscale range from 0-8, which higher scores indicating either more anxiety or more depression).
Time frame: Change across the ~2 weeks at home
Change in self-referential affect
Average self-reported emotion intensity using Likert-style scales ranging from 1-5 during the Karaoke task, in which higher scores represent greater emotional intensity.
Time frame: Change between two days, one following a night in the Sham condition and one following a night in the Stim condition, separated by ~1-2 weeks
Frontolimbic emotional reactivity circuit activity
fMRI activity in the frontolimbic emotional reactivity circuit activity for the own-singing v. professional-singing contrast during the Karaoke task
Time frame: Change between two days, one following a night in the Sham condition and one following a night in the Stim condition, separated by ~1-2 weeks
Acute change in slow-wave sleep (minutes)
Change in minutes of time in slow-wave sleep
Time frame: Change between two nights, one night in the Sham condition and one night in the Stim condition, separated by ~1-2 weeks
Chronic change in slow-wave sleep (minutes)
Change in minutes of time in slow-wave sleep
Time frame: Change across the ~2 weeks at home
Acute change in slow-wave sleep (%)
Change in percent of time in slow-wave sleep
Time frame: Change between two nights, one night in the Sham condition and one night in the Stim condition, separated by ~1-2 weeks
Chronic change in slow-wave sleep (%)
Change in percent of time in slow-wave sleep
Time frame: Change across the ~2 weeks at home
Acute change in total sleep time
Change in minutes asleep
Time frame: Change between two nights, one night in the Sham condition and one night in the Stim condition, separated by ~1-2 weeks
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Chronic change in total sleep time
Change in minutes asleep
Time frame: Change across the ~2 weeks at home
Acute change in sleep efficiency
Change in proportion of time in bed spent asleep
Time frame: Change between two nights, one night in the Sham condition and one night in the Stim condition, separated by ~1-2 weeks
Chronic change in sleep efficiency
Change in proportion of time in bed spent asleep
Time frame: Change across the ~2 weeks at home
Acute change in wake after sleep onset
Change in minutes awake after sleep onset
Time frame: Change between two nights, one night in the Sham condition and one night in the Stim condition, separated by ~1-2 weeks
Chronic change in wake after sleep onset
Change in minutes awake after sleep onset
Time frame: Change across the ~2 weeks at home
Acute change in sleep latency
Change in minutes until sleep onset
Time frame: Change between two nights, one night in the Sham condition and one night in the Stim condition, separated by ~1-2 weeks
Chronic change in sleep latency
Change in minutes until sleep onset
Time frame: Change across the ~2 weeks at home
Change in X-probe d'
Change in the standardized hit rate for AX trials minus the standardized false alarm rate to BX trials on the modified AX-CPT task
Time frame: Change between three days; one following a night in the Sham condition, one following a night in the Stim condition, and one following either the Sham2 or Stim2 condition; with ~1-2 weeks between each condition
Change in B-cue d'
Change in the standardized hit rate for BY trials minus the standardized false alarm rate to AX trials on the modified AX-CPT task
Time frame: Change between three days; one following a night in the Sham condition, one following a night in the Stim condition, and one following either the Sham2 or Stim2 condition; with ~1-2 weeks between each condition
Change in Y-probe d'
Change in the standardized hit rate for BY trials minus the standardized false alarm rate to AY trials on the modified AX-CPT task
Time frame: Change between three days; one following a night in the Sham condition, one following a night in the Stim condition, and one following either the Sham2 or Stim2 condition; with ~1-2 weeks between each condition
Change in vigilant attention d'
Change in the standardized hit rate for AX trials minus the standardized false alarm rate to CD trials on the modified AX-CPT task
Time frame: Change between three days; one following a night in the Sham condition, one following a night in the Stim condition, and one following either the Sham2 or Stim2 condition; with ~1-2 weeks between each condition