Detailed Description:
The primary objective of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of SocialVille, an online training program we have recently developed (with support of a Phase I SBIR award # XX) to treat the social cognition deficits evident in schizophrenia (DSM-IV ICD-9 Code 295.90).
SocialVille is a computerized, browser-playable program suite, designed to target information processing in the core social cognition domains of deficit in schizophrenia. It can be used from any internet-connected computer; through a dedicated clinician portal, the treating clinician can register users to treatment, continuously track and monitor their performance, and coach users throughout training. The specific aims of the study are:
Specific Aim 1: Evaluate the efficacy of SocialVille as a social cognition treatment in individuals with schizophrenia. We will conduct a large-scale, multi-site, double-blind, randomized controlled clinical trial of the SocialVille medical device vs. an active computer games control, which approximates challenge, computer time and interaction with experimenter. This large trial will be conducted at four sites: the San Francisco VA Medical Center (site PI: Dr. Sophia Vinogradov), the Greater Los Angeles VA (Dr. Michael Green), Harvard University (Dr. Christine Hooker), and University of California, Los Angeles (Drs. Joseph Ventura and Keith Nuechterlein). Study participants will complete 30 hours of training from home. At baseline, mid-way through training and immediately following training, we will employ a structured assessment battery with a co-primary SC performance measure and a co-primary functional performance measure, as well as secondary measures of SC, functional capacity, functional outcome, motivation, and quality of life.
Specific Aim 2: Identify specific populations of treatment responders and non-responders. We will examine predictors of SC gain based on baseline participant demographic, symptom level, computer use, SC, and functional measures, as well as on learning rate and plateau performance measures derived over the course of SocialVille use to determine if it is possible to identify specific populations that respond very well to SocialVille use, or those who are unlikely to respond to SocialVille use.
Specific Aim 3: Evaluate the effects of training on the relatively distinct low vs. high-level social cognition constructs. We will separately examine the effects of training on the independent SC factors of low level social cue detection and high-level inferential process, correlated with clinical symptoms and functional outcome, respectively.