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Brain function and clinical characterization in the Boston adolescent neuroimaging of depression and anxiety study

Author(s)
Hubbard; Siless, V; Frosch, IR; Goncalves, M; Lo, N; Wang, J; Bauer, CCC; Conroy, K; Cosby, E; Hay, A; Jones, R; Pinaire, M; Vaz De Souza, F; Vergara, G; Ghosh, S; Henin, A; Hirshfeld-Becker, DR; Hofmann, SG; Rosso, IM; Auerbach, RP; Pizzagalli, DA; Yendiki, A; Gabrieli, JDE; Whitfield-Gabrieli, S; ... Show more Show less
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Abstract
© 2020 We present a Human Connectome Project study tailored toward adolescent anxiety and depression. This study is one of the first studies of the Connectomes Related to Human Diseases initiative and is collecting structural, functional, and diffusion-weighted brain imaging data from up to 225 adolescents (ages 14–17 years), 150 of whom are expected to have a current diagnosis of an anxiety and/or depressive disorder. Comprehensive clinical and neuropsychological evaluations and longitudinal clinical data are also being collected. This article provides an overview of task functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) protocols and preliminary findings (N = 140), as well as clinical and neuropsychological characterization of adolescents. Data collection is ongoing for an additional 85 adolescents, most of whom are expected to have a diagnosis of an anxiety and/or depressive disorder. Data from the first 140 adolescents are projected for public release through the National Institutes of Health Data Archive (NDA) with the timing of this manuscript. All other data will be made publicly-available through the NDA at regularly scheduled intervals. This article is intended to serve as an introduction to this project as well as a reference for those seeking to clinical, neurocognitive, and task fMRI data from this public resource.
Date issued
2020
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/136010
Department
McGovern Institute for Brain Research at MIT; Harvard University--MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology; Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences; Martinos Imaging Center (McGovern Institute for Brain Research at MIT)
Journal
NeuroImage: Clinical
Publisher
Elsevier BV

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