grant

Characterizing neuroimaging 'brain-behavior' model performance bias in rural populations

Organization YALE UNIVERSITYLocation NEW HAVEN, UNITED STATESPosted 1 Sept 2023Deadline 31 Aug 2026
NIHUS FederalResearch GrantFY2025AdolescentAdolescent YouthAffectAgeAlgorithmsAreaAttentionBehaviorBrainBrain Nervous SystemClinicalCognitionCognitiveCognitive deficitsComplexDataData CollectionData SetDevelopmentDiagnosisEmergent TechnologiesEmerging TechnologiesEncephalonEnsureExclusionFaceFunctional MRIFunctional Magnetic Resonance ImagingGeneral PopulationGeneral PublicGeographic AreaGeographic LocationsGeographic RegionGeographical LocationGeographyHealthHealth CareHumanIndividualLearningMachine LearningMeasuresMental HealthMental HygieneMental disordersMental health disordersModelingModern ManModernizationMoodsNatureOutcomeParticipantPatient RecruitmentsPatternPerformancePhysiciansPopulationPopulation GroupPsychiatric DiseasePsychiatric DisorderPsychiatryPsychological HealthResearchRestRuralRural HealthRural PopulationRural groupRural peopleSamplingSampling StudiesScientistSiteSymptomsTechniquesTechnologyTestingTrainingTranslationsTreatment outcomeUnited StatesValidationagesbrain basedbrain behaviorcareerclinical decision-makingcognitive defectscognitive developmentcognitive taskcomputer based predictionconnectomeconnectome based predictive modelingdevelopmentaldevelopmental diseasedevelopmental disorderdifferences in healthfMRIfacesfacialgeographic sitehealth differencejuvenilejuvenile humanmachine based learningmachine learning based modelmachine learning modelmental illnessmetropolitanmodel designneural imagingneuro-imagingneuroimagingneurological imagingnovelparticipant recruitmentpredictive modelingpreventpreventingpsychiatric illnesspsychiatric symptompsychological disorderpublic health relevancerural arearural dwellingrural householdsrural individualrural locationrural patientsrural regionrural residencetooltranslationtreatment choiceurban areaurban locationurban regionurban residencevalidationsverbalvirtual
Sign up free to applyApply link · pipeline · email alerts
— or —

Get email alerts for similar roles

Weekly digest · no password needed · unsubscribe any time

Full Description

Modified Project Summary Section

Nearly one-fifth of the Unites States population resides in a rural region, and approximately one-fifth of those residents suffers from a mental illness. While these rates of mental illness are similar to urban areas, individuals living in rural regions face a disproportionate burden of negative psychiatric outcomes. Modern advances in psychiatric research have focused on using machine learning and human neuroimaging to predict diagnoses and treatment outcomes. However, recent evidence suggests that machine learning models themselves may drive differences in health outcomes through performance differences.

Specifically, clinical decision-making models created in predominantly one population group may demonstrate reduced generalizability in other population groups (e.g., poorer likelihood of choosing the correct treatment if patients are rural). Given that virtually all neuroimaging ‘brain-behavior’ predictive models in psychiatry research are generated from data collected in highly populated metropolitan areas, this study will evaluate ‘brain-behavior’ models for performance differences in rural populations. It will also investigate means of eliminating these performance differences that could create further health outcome gaps in rural populations. In Aim 1, I will use neuroimaging data from 9,811 individuals in the Adolescent Brain and Cognitive Development Study to create a ‘brain-behavior’ predictive model of cognition.

In Aim 2, I will evaluate this model for urban-rural performance differences and pursue strategies to reduce these differences. This study will have important implications for understanding how algorithms in healthcare drive health outcome gaps and how we can reduce these gaps by designing models that perform the same across all populations.

Grant Number: 5F30MD018941-03
NIH Institute/Center: NIH

Principal Investigator: Brendan Adkinson

Sign up free to get the apply link, save to pipeline, and set email alerts.

Sign up free →

Agency Plan

7-day free trial

Unlock procurement & grants

Upgrade to access active tenders from World Bank, UNDP, ADB and more — with email alerts and pipeline tracking.

$29.99 / month

  • 🔔Email alerts for new matching tenders
  • 🗂️Track tenders in your pipeline
  • 💰Filter by contract value
  • 📥Export results to CSV
  • 📌Save searches with one click
Start 7-day free trial →