grant

Longitudinal Antecedents of Attention Problems in Very Preterm Children: Role of Epigenetics, Executive Function, and Caregiver Psychological Distress

Organization WOMEN AND INFANTS HOSPITAL-RHODE ISLANDLocation PROVIDENCE, UNITED STATESPosted 1 Apr 2022Deadline 31 Mar 2027
NIHUS FederalResearch GrantFY20250-11 years oldAD/HDADHDAgeAttentionAttention deficit hyperactivity disorderBehavioralBiologicalBiological MarkersBirthCare GiversCareer Development AwardsCareer Development Awards and ProgramsCareer Development Programs K-SeriesCaregiversChildChild YouthChildhoodChildren (0-21)CognitiveDNA MethylationDNA SequenceDataData AnalysesData AnalysisDevelopmentEarly InterventionEarly identificationEnvironmentEnvironmental FactorEnvironmental Risk FactorEpigeneticEpigenetic ChangeEpigenetic MechanismEpigenetic ProcessFunctional impairmentFutureGene ExpressionGenesGestationGrantHeterogeneityHospitalsHumanIQ DeficitIndividualIndividual DifferencesInfantInterventionJointsK-AwardsK-Series Research Career ProgramsLifeLocationLongitudinal StudiesMeasuresMediatingMental disordersMental health disordersMentorsMentorshipMissionModern ManNIMHNational Institute of Mental HealthNeonatalNeurocognitive DeficitOutcomeParturitionPatternPhenotypePopulationPredominantly Hyperactive-Impulsive Type Attention-Deficit DisorderPredominantly Hyperactive-Impulsive Type Hyperactivity DisorderPregnancyProbabilistic ModelsProbability ModelsPsychiatric DiseasePsychiatric DisorderPsychopathologyResearchResearch ActivityResearch Career ProgramResearch ResourcesResourcesRiskRisk FactorsRoleSamplingSchoolsStatistical ModelsStrategic PlanningStructureSymptomsTechniquesTestingTrainingTraining ActivityUniversitiesWomanWorkabnormal psychologyadverse consequenceadverse outcomeagesbio-markersbiologicbiologic markerbiomarkercare givingcareercaregivingclinical relevanceclinical significanceclinically relevantclinically significantdata interpretationdevelopmentaldiagnostic criteriaearly childhoodendophenotypeenvironmental riskepigeneticallyexecutive controlexecutive functionexperienceextreme prematurityextremely premature infantextremely pretermextremely preterm infantfunctional outcomeshigh dimensionalityhigh riskhigh risk grouphigh risk individualhigh risk peoplehigh risk populationimprovedinattentioninattentivenessintelligence quotient deficitkidslife spanlifespanlong-term studylongitudinal outcome studiesmedical collegemedical schoolsmental illnessneuralneurobehaviorneurocognitive declineneurocognitive impairmentnovelparent grantpediatricperformance based assessmentsperformance based measurementperformance based measurespremature neonatespremature newbornpreterm neonatepreterm newbornprogramspsychiatric illnesspsychological disorderpsychological distressrate of changeresilienceresilientresponsescaffoldscaffoldingschool of medicinescreen timeskillssocial rolestatistical linear mixed modelsstatistical linear modelssynergismtelevision watchingtraining moduletv watchingvery prematurevery pretermyoungster
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

PROJECT SUMMARY/ABSTRACT
This K01 proposal will prepare the candidate for an independent research career studying environmental and

biological contributors to child neurodevelopmental trajectories in typically-developing and high-risk populations,

with specific expertise in human developmental behavioral epigenetics and clinically-relevant cognitive

phenotypes (e.g., inattention). Research in developmental psychopathology has been successful in identifying

risk factors for attention problems across multiple domains, including biological, cognitive, and caregiving factors.

However, a missed opportunity is the study of multiple, longitudinal trajectories of risk factors in relation to

trajectories of inattention. Specifically, there is a need to understand whether there are heterogeneous

trajectories of inattention in early childhood, particularly during the transition to formal schooling (age 5-7) when

increases in inattention are common. Further, understanding how changes in risk factors across early childhood

relate to changes in inattention across the transition to formal schooling could provide critical information

regarding modifiable targets and optimal timing for screening and intervening with high-risk children. The

proposed study will leverage existing data from two parent grants (R01HD072267; R01HD084515; NOVI study)

focused on neurodevelopmental outcomes in children born very preterm. The current study proposes to test

associations between trajectories of biological (i.e., DNA methylation), cognitive (i.e., executive function) and

caregiving (i.e., psychological distress) factors and trajectories of child inattention in a sample of children born

very preterm, a group known to be at elevated risk for attention problems. Specific aims are as follows: (1) to

characterize trajectories of inattention in very preterm children; (2) to test the contributions of biological, cognitive,

and caregiving factors to trajectories of inattention; and (3) to test how changes in biological, cognitive, and

caregiving factors relate to trajectories of inattention. The applicant’s mentorship team will scaffold completion

of the study aims and provide needed training in (1) processing and (2) analysis of high-dimensional, longitudinal

epigenetic data, (3) advanced statistical techniques for longitudinal data analysis, and (4) frameworks (e.g.,

RDOC) for studying child psychopathology. The resources and intellectual environment at the Brown Center for

the Study of Children at Risk, Women and Infant’s Hospital, and Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown

University constitute an ideal setting to launch an independent research career. This project will provide

preliminary data for a future R01 investigating how trajectories of DNA methylation are established and altered

across development (e.g., as a function of environmental risk factors) as well as grants that follow NOVI children

into later childhood. This project is aligned with NIMH strategic priorities given its focus on charting the

development of inattention in childhood, identifying risk factors and biomarkers for inattention that could serve

as novel intervention targets, and isolating sensitive periods for interventions aimed at mitigating long-term

functional impairment.

Grant Number: 5K01MH129510-04
NIH Institute/Center: NIH

Principal Investigator: Marie Camerota

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 →