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We're sorry. This study is closed and no longer recruiting participants.

STUDY BASICS

Are you an 18 year old female who is physically and emotionally healthy? Are you right-handed and without braces? If so, you may be able to participate in a research study to find out how sleep patterns affect emotions, thinking, and mood. Compensation provided.


STUDY PURPOSE
The purpose of this study is to examine differences in sleep, emotion, and brain activity in healthy adolescents compared to those with bipolar disorder. Researchers hope their findings will lead to a better understanding of how sleep affects brain activity and improved treatments in the future.
COULD THIS STUDY BE RIGHT FOR YOU?
  • Women age 18
  • Right-handed
  • Do not wear braces on your teeth
  • Fluent in English
  • Physically and emotionally healthy, with no past history of mood disorder, anxiety disorder, or any other psychiatric diagnosis
  • No first-degree relatives with a history of bipolar disorder
  • Able and willing to undergo fMRI scanning

WHAT PARTICIPANTS CAN EXPECT
Participation involves two study visits over the course of about 2 to 4 weeks. Study procedures include interviews, questionnaires, wearing an activity watch, and completing tasks on a computer while undergoing a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) scan. An fMRI is a non-invasive procedure that measures brain activity, and it does not involve radiation.
IRB: PRO16120065B
- Sleep Disturbance in Youth with Bipolar Disorder at High Risk for Suicide: Effects on Neural Circuitry Supporting Emotion Regulation and Treatment Response - Healthy Controls

RESEARCH AREAS:
  Healthy Volunteer

PHONE NUMBER: 1-866-438-8230
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INTERESTED?

Visit https://pittplusme.org/study/993 and click on "I'm Interested" or call 1-866-438-8230.


LEARN MORE

PittPlusMe.org
1-866-438-8230
PittPlusMe@pitt.edu
@PittPlusMe
@PittPlusMe

MEET THE RESEARCHER


Peter Franzen

Peter L. Franzen, PhD, is an Assistant Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Pittsburgh. A graduate of the University of Arizona, Dr. Franzen’s research interests include the relationship of sleep and sleep disorders on emotional function.