Viewing Study NCT01683032


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Study NCT ID: NCT01683032
Status: COMPLETED
Last Update Posted: 2014-11-19
First Post: 2012-08-26
Is NOT Gene Therapy: False
Has Adverse Events: False

Brief Title: A Study on the Effect of Methylphenidate on Creativity of Healthy Adults
Sponsor: Shalvata Mental Health Center
Organization:

Study Overview

Official Title: None
Status: COMPLETED
Status Verified Date: 2014-11
Last Known Status: None
Delayed Posting: No
If Stopped, Why?: Not Stopped
Has Expanded Access: False
If Expanded Access, NCT#: N/A
Has Expanded Access, NCT# Status: N/A
Acronym: None
Brief Summary: Creative cognition plays an important role in art, invention and innovation, as well as in everyday life and thus has a significant effect on society as a whole. Research with healthy, normal participants and those with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder indicates a possible inverse relationship between attentional function and creativity. This evidence raises the possibility that Methylphenidate (MPH; Ritalin) could decrease creativity in people using it for cognitive enhancement. However, this question has not been addressed by previous studies. Hence, the present study aims to examine the effect of MPH on creativity in healthy young adults.
Detailed Description: Background:

The past decade has seen a rise in the use of prescription stimulants not only by ADHD-diagnosed individual but also by normal healthy individuals for cognitive enhancement. This resulted in a corresponding escalation of illicit use, particularly in college students (confirmed by numerous survey results). In light of this trend, an important issue concerning the effect of cognitive enhancement on the way people think, or what could be called "cognitive style", was raised. Specifically, there has been concern that stimulants might decrease creativity in people using the drugs for cognitive enhancement(.

Creativity has been defined as the ability to produce responses which are both novel (i.e., original, rare and unexpected) and suitable (i.e., adaptive and useful according to the task constrains; ). Many models have been suggested to explain creativity. According to the well established twofold model of creativity, the creative process begins with an associative generation of crudely formed ideas, which is followed by an expansion and exploration of these ideas through a process of evaluation . Since creativity plays an important role in producing novel and useful ideas , it was further speculated that in case of cognitive enhancers continues to be more widely practiced and indeed impair creativity, the effect on society as a whole could be grave The question of whether stimulants might decrease creativity is yet to be elucidated, given that most of previous studies focused on ADHD-diagnosed children, with mixed results; While some of them found that stimulants maintained creativity, others reported it actually worsened the scores on tasks assessing creativity.

Moreover, despite the increase in both illicit and prescribed stimulant use by healthy adults (discussed above) the study by Farah et al.(2009), is so far the only published report investigating stimulant effects on creativity among these individuals. The authors examined the effect of Adderall (a mixture of amphetamine salts) upon creativity, in 16 healthy adults on four tests of creativity, "two tasks requiring divergent thought and two requiring convergent thought (p. 542)." Only performance on the convergent tasks was affected, and the effect depended on baseline performance: in one case enhancing it, particularly for lower-performing individuals, and in the other case enhancing it for the lower-performing and impairing it for higher-performing individuals. This pattern of differential effect of stimulants based on baseline performance, has been noted in other studies of stimulants and cognition and is not unique to creative thought.

Hence, the question of whether stimulants might decrease creativity in healthy adults using the drugs for cognitive enhancement is still open. To best of our knowledge, though MPH is a widely used by healthy normal individuals to enhance cognition, its effect upon creativity of healthy adults has not been studied before. We therefore sought to investigate the effect of MPH upon creativity in healthy adults.

Participants:

The experiment will include a group of 30 healthy adults (male and female). Participants, aged 21-40 years, will be recruited through an advertisement posted at the University of Haifa (including the website of Haifa University).

Screening Phase:

Potential subjects will be required to arrive at the Social and Affective Neuroscience Lab in Haifa University for two visits:

On the first visit, the risks and requirements of this clinical research trial will be explained to each potential subject. Those volunteering to take part will read and sign the Informed Consent Form for participation in the clinical research trial before any trial-related procedures are performed

* Upon obtaining the signed informed consent, inclusion and exclusion criteria will be reviewed to verify the subject's eligibility. Therefore all participants will be interviewed by psychiatrist with the Minimal Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV Axis I (SCID-I; First, Gibbons, Spitzer, \& Williams, 1995) to exclude those with the presence of lifetime diagnoses of any Axis I disorder.
* In addition, to rule out ADHD, participants will be required to fill in the following questionnaires: conners ADHD Adults Rating-Scale, ASRS v1.1-18 and Wender-Utah self-report rating- scales, Adult ADHD Self-Report Scale (ASRS) Symptom Checklist. Moreover, to rule out any other clinical disorder.
* Each participant will go through a physical examination by a physician and an ECG test to eliminate the risk of previously undiagnosed arrhythmia.

In one of the visits, participants will receive a capsule containing Methylphenidate or placebo (prior to performing the tasks), and in the other visit they will receive a capsule containing placebo. Randomization will be done by the psychiatrist, so that both experimenter and participants are blind to the content of the capsule (The psychiatrist's contact information will be provided in the Informed Consent Form).

MPH dosage will be determined according to participants' body weight: 10 mg in case weight\<40 kg; 30 mg in case weight\>90 kg; otherwise 20 mg.

Study Oversight

Has Oversight DMC: True
Is a FDA Regulated Drug?: None
Is a FDA Regulated Device?: None
Is an Unapproved Device?: None
Is a PPSD?: None
Is a US Export?: None
Is an FDA AA801 Violation?: