Clinical Psychopharmacology Unit, Research Department of Clinical, Educational and Health Psychology, University College London, London, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2023 Mar 13;18(3):e0282861. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0282861. eCollection 2023.
The vagus nerve (VN) is a neural nexus between the brain and body, enabling bidirectional regulation of mental functioning and peripheral physiology. Some limited correlational findings suggest an association between VN activation and a particular form of self-regulation: compassionate responding. Interventions that are geared towards strengthening self-compassion in particular, can serve as an antidote to toxic shame and self-criticism and improve psychological health.
We describe a protocol for examining the role of VN activation on 'state' self-compassion, self-criticism, and related outcomes. By combining transcutaneous vagus nerve stimulation (tVNS) with a brief imagery-based self-compassion intervention, we aim to preliminarily test additivity versus synergy between these distinct bottom-up and top-down methods for putatively regulating vagal activity. We also test whether the effects of VN stimulation accumulate with daily stimulation and daily compassionate imagery practice.
Using a randomized 2 x 2 factorial (stimulation x imagery condition) design, healthy volunteers (n = 120) receive active (tragus) or sham (earlobe) tVNS plus standardized (audio-recorded) self-compassionate or sham mental imagery instructions. These interventions are delivered in a university-based psychological laboratory in two sessions, one week apart, as well as being self-administered between sessions by participants at home. Pre-stimulation, peri-stimulation and post-imagery measures of state self-compassion, self-criticism and related self-report outcomes are assessed in two lab sessions, separated by a week (Days 1 and 8). Heart rate variability is used as a physiological metric of vagal activity and an eye-tracking task assesses attentional bias to compassionate faces during the two lab sessions. On Days 2-7, participants continue their randomly assigned stimulation and imagery tasks at home, and complete state measures at the end of each remote session.
Demonstrating modulation of compassionate responding using tVNS would support a causal link between VN activation and compassion. This would provide a basis for future studies of bioelectronic approaches to augmenting therapeutic contemplative techniques.
ClinicalTrials.gov, Identifier: NCT05441774 (Date: July 1st 2022).
迷走神经(VN)是大脑和身体之间的神经枢纽,能够双向调节精神功能和外周生理。一些有限的相关性研究结果表明,VN 激活与一种特殊形式的自我调节有关:同情反应。特别是那些旨在增强自我同情的干预措施可以作为对抗毒性羞耻感和自我批评的解毒剂,并改善心理健康。
我们描述了一种检查 VN 激活对“状态”自我同情、自我批判和相关结果的作用的方案。通过将经皮迷走神经刺激(tVNS)与基于意象的短暂自我同情干预相结合,我们旨在初步测试这些不同的自上而下和自下而上方法在假定调节迷走神经活动方面的相加作用与协同作用。我们还测试了 VN 刺激是否会随着每日刺激和每日同情意象练习而累积。
使用随机 2 x 2 因子(刺激 x 意象条件)设计,健康志愿者(n = 120)接受主动(耳垂)或假(耳屏)tVNS 加标准化(音频记录)自我同情或假心理意象指令。这些干预措施在大学心理实验室中进行,每两周一次,共两次,参与者在家中也可以自行进行。在两次实验室会议之间的一周内(第 1 天和第 8 天),在预刺激、刺激期间和意象后评估状态自我同情、自我批判和相关自我报告结果的测量。心率变异性被用作迷走神经活动的生理指标,眼动追踪任务评估在两次实验室会议期间对同情面孔的注意力偏差。在第 2-7 天,参与者继续在家中进行随机分配的刺激和意象任务,并在每个远程会议结束时完成状态测量。
使用 tVNS 证明同情反应的调节将支持 VN 激活与同情之间的因果关系。这将为未来研究生物电子方法增强治疗性沉思技术提供基础。
ClinicalTrials.gov,标识符:NCT05441774(日期:2022 年 7 月 1 日)。
OSF 注册:https://osf.io/4t9ha。