Actively Recruiting
Social Cognition in Pediatric Epilepsy
Led by CHU de Reims · Updated on 2025-09-22
96
Participants Needed
1
Research Sites
363 weeks
Total Duration
On this page
AI-Summary
What this Trial Is About
The purpose of this study is to investigate the development of social cognition skills in pediatric epilepsy compared to healthy children. There are evidences indicating that children with epilepsy have executive dysfunctions and language problems. Executive functions refer to multiple cognitive processes that contribute to human higher order abilities, such as purposeful and future-orientated behavior. Moreover, the literature regarding development of non epileptic children, with ordinary development indicates that executive functions and language are linked to the emergence of social cognition. Then, the investigators asked if children with epilepsy, as they commonly present executive dysfunctions, would show an atypical development of social cognition. Children with epilepsy and a control group of healthy volunteers will be compared to identify relationships between executive functions, language and social cognition.
CONDITIONS
Official Title
Social Cognition in Pediatric Epilepsy
Who Can Participate
Eligibility Criteria
You may qualify if you...
- Children aged 6 to 12 years with a diagnosis of epilepsy
- French native speaker
- Control group of age-matched children without epilepsy who meet other patient selection criteria
You will not qualify if you...
- Neurological or psychiatric disease in control group
- Raven's Matrices score below the 10th percentile
AI-Screening
AI-Powered Screening
Complete this quick 3-step screening to check your eligibility
Trial Site Locations
Total: 1 location
1
Chu Reims
Reims, France, 51092
Actively Recruiting
Research Team
M
Melanie Jennesson Lyver
CONTACT
How is the study designed?
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Masking
NONE
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Model
PARALLEL
Primary Purpose
BASIC_SCIENCE
Number of Arms
2
Not the Right Trial for You?
Explore thousands of other clinical trials that might be a better match.
Sign up to get personalized trial recommendations delivered to your inbox.
Already have an account? Log in here