Tokyo, Dec. 9 -- UMIN Clinical Trials Registry (UMIN-CTR) received information related to the study (UMIN000060007) titled 'Impact of Facial Expression Control During Exercise on the Development of Exercise-Induced Brain Fatigue' on Dec. 8.

Study Type: Interventional

Study Design: Basic Design - Cross-over Randomization - Randomized Blinding - Open -no one is blinded Control - Placebo

Primary Sponsor: Institute - Niigata University of Health and Welfare

Condition: Condition - healthy adult Classification by malignancy - Others Genomic information - NO

Objective: Narrative objectives1 - It has been shown that facial expressions during exercise, particularly movements of the mouth, are associated with decreases in subjective arousal. However, it remains unclear whether controlling facial expressions can suppress decreases in subjective arousal and the development of brain fatigue. The present study aims to clarify whether intentionally keeping the mouth closed during exercise can attenuate reductions in subjective arousal and brain fatigue. Basic objectives2 - Safety,Efficacy

Intervention: Interventions/Control_1 - the condition in which participants intentionally keep their mouth closed during exercise Interventions/Control_2 - the condition in which participants intentionally keep their mouth open during exercise

Eligibility: Age-lower limit - 18 years-old = Gender - Male and Female Key inclusion criteria - individuals who volunteered to participate in response to email recruitment or announcements posted on the website Key exclusion criteria - individuals with psychiatric disorders or color blindness (as the executive function task involves color stimuli) Target Size - 30

Recruitment Status: Recruitment status - Preinitiation Date of protocol fixation - 2025 Year 12 Month 08 Day Anticipated trial start date - 2026 Year 01 Month 05 Day Last follow-up date - 2027 Year 03 Month 31 Day

To know more, visit https://center6.umin.ac.jp/cgi-open-bin/ctr_e/ctr_view.cgi?recptno=R000068632

Disclaimer: Curated by HT Syndication.