Purpose

This first study will enroll 3 groups of patients with vocal fold nodules that will receive different schedules of ambulatory voice biofeedback (100% frequency feedback, 25% frequency feedback, summary feedback) to avoid their upper 15th percentile of vocal loudness.

Condition

Eligibility

Eligible Ages
Between 18 Years and 65 Years
Eligible Genders
All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
No

Inclusion Criteria

Patients with vocal fold nodules

Exclusion Criteria

Non-English speakers are excluded because prompts on the smartphone app are only available in English

Study Design

Phase
N/A
Study Type
Interventional
Allocation
Randomized
Intervention Model
Parallel Assignment
Primary Purpose
Treatment
Masking
None (Open Label)

Arm Groups

ArmDescriptionAssigned Intervention
Experimental
100% frequency
Some patients will be assigned (via block randomization) to receive ambulatory voice biofeedback (100% frequency - vibrotactile cueing every time the participant exceeds a vocal intensity threshold). Voice monitoring will be conducted for 3 days (device automatically turns off after 42 minutes of voicing): Day 1: biofeedback will be active all day , Day 2: the day after Day 1, no biofeedback, just monitoring to test short-term retention. Day 3: 7 days post-Day 1, no biofeedback, just monitoring to test longer-term retention.
  • Behavioral: Ambulatory voice biofeedback
    Subjects will be provided cues regarding their vocal behavior in daily life. The cues will either be: 100% feedback = a vibrotactile cue on a smartwatch every time the patient voices incorrectly... 25% feedback = a vibrotactile cue on a smartwatch every 4th time the patient voices incorrectly... Summary feedback = the patient's overall compliance (percentage of voiced time within desired limits) will be presented via a smartwatch every 2 minutes of voicing.
Experimental
25% frequency
Some patients will be assigned (via block randomization) to receive ambulatory voice biofeedback (25% frequency - vibrotactile cueing every 4th time the participant exceeds a vocal intensity threshold). Voice monitoring will be conducted for 3 days (device automatically turns off after 42 minutes of voicing): Day 1: biofeedback will be active all day , Day 2: the day after Day 1, no biofeedback, just monitoring to test short-term retention. Day 3: 7 days post-Day 1, no biofeedback, just monitoring to test longer-term retention.
  • Behavioral: Ambulatory voice biofeedback
    Subjects will be provided cues regarding their vocal behavior in daily life. The cues will either be: 100% feedback = a vibrotactile cue on a smartwatch every time the patient voices incorrectly... 25% feedback = a vibrotactile cue on a smartwatch every 4th time the patient voices incorrectly... Summary feedback = the patient's overall compliance (percentage of voiced time within desired limits) will be presented via a smartwatch every 2 minutes of voicing.
Experimental
Summary feedback
Some patients will be assigned (via block randomization) to receive ambulatory voice biofeedback (summary - no cueing, statistics shown every 2 minutes of voicing). Voice monitoring will be conducted for 3 days (device automatically turns off after 42 minutes of voicing): Day 1: biofeedback will be active all day , Day 2: the day after Day 1, no biofeedback, just monitoring to test short-term retention. Day 3: 7 days post-Day 1, no biofeedback, just monitoring to test longer-term retention.
  • Behavioral: Ambulatory voice biofeedback
    Subjects will be provided cues regarding their vocal behavior in daily life. The cues will either be: 100% feedback = a vibrotactile cue on a smartwatch every time the patient voices incorrectly... 25% feedback = a vibrotactile cue on a smartwatch every 4th time the patient voices incorrectly... Summary feedback = the patient's overall compliance (percentage of voiced time within desired limits) will be presented via a smartwatch every 2 minutes of voicing.

More Details

Status
Completed
Sponsor
Massachusetts General Hospital

Study Contact

Detailed Description

We will conduct this study (based on principles of motor learning) using novel smartphone-based ambulatory voice biofeedback systems aimed at improving the carryover of newly established vocal behaviors into daily life. This first study will determine which of three types of ambulatory feedback results in better learning/retention (100% frequency, 25% frequency, or delayed summary feedback every 2 minutes of voicing) of a new vocal behavior (reduced vocal intensity) in three groups of 15 patients with vocal fold nodules. Hypothesis: Patients receiving lower frequency or summary feedback will produce lower initial performance but higher short- and long-term retention than patients receiving feedback 100% of the time.

Notice

Study information shown on this site is derived from ClinicalTrials.gov (a public registry operated by the National Institutes of Health). The listing of studies provided is not certain to be all studies for which you might be eligible. Furthermore, study eligibility requirements can be difficult to understand and may change over time, so it is wise to speak with your medical care provider and individual research study teams when making decisions related to participation.