Hero image with Pittsburgh background https://pittplusme.org/study/1070

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

STUDY BASICS

Are you an 18-30 year old who has never had a brain injury and has no family history of psychiatric disorders? If so, you may be able to take part in a research study investigating how the brain develops. Compensation and parking are provided.


STUDY PURPOSE

Adolescence and early adulthood are a critical period for brain development. Some mental illnesses, such as anxiety, mood disorders, and schizophrenia, can develop during this time. The purpose of this study is to learn more about how brains change as children get older and are faced with more difficult mental challenges. Researchers hope their findings may lead to a better understanding of brain development in people with mental disorders, potentially resulting in improved diagnoses and treatments in the future.


COULD THIS STUDY BE RIGHT FOR YOU?
  • Ages 18-30
  • No history of brain injury
  • No family history of psychiatric disorders
  • Able and willing to undergo MRI scanning (no non-removable metal in body, weigh less than 250 pounds, not claustrophobic)

WHAT PARTICIPANTS CAN EXPECT

Participation involves 3 in-person study visits, each of which take about 3 hours. During the first visit, you will play computer games, answer questions, and complete some forms on paper or a computer. During the second visit, following a brief interview, you will have a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan while you watch videos and play games. During the third visit you will have an electroencephalogram (EEG) scan. EEG measures brain activity, and MRI takes pictures of the brain. Both procedures are not invasive and do not involve radiation. The study is longitudinal, so you will be invited to come back for follow-up visits at 18- and 36-months, during which you would complete a similar set of procedures. Participants are compensated again for each follow-up visit.


IRB: STUDY19030154B
- Brain Mechanisms Underlying Plasticity in the Specialization of Cognitive Systems through the Adolescent Period

RESEARCH AREAS:
  Healthy Volunteer


PHONE NUMBER: 1-866-438-8230
SHARE STUDY
Printer Printer   Email A FriendEmail A Friend   ShareShare   TweetTweet   Linked-InLinked-In

INTERESTED?

Visit https://pittplusme.org/study/1070 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


Beatriz Luna , PhD

Beatriz Luna, PhD, is the Staunton Professor of Psychiatry and Pediatrics at the University of Pittsburgh. An accomplished researcher, Dr. Luna is the founder and director of the Laboratory of Neurocognitive Development at Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic. Her main area of focus is on how teens’ brains develop and mature.