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2015 journal original-research Neuron

Prediction as a humanitarian and pragmatic contribution from human cognitive neuroscience

Gabrieli JDE, Ghosh SS, Whitfield-Gabrieli S

Identifiers and access

DOI
10.1016/j.neuron.2014.10.047
PubMed
25569345
PMC
PMC4287988
PDF
Open-access copy →
Cited by
582

Key findings

This review surveys neuroimaging studies in which 'neuromarkers' predict future education, learning, criminality, health behaviours, and treatment responses — often better than behavioural measures — arguing that neuroprognosis can support personalised educational and clinical practice.

Abstract

Source: pubmed

Neuroimaging has greatly enhanced the cognitive neuroscience understanding of the human brain and its variation across individuals (neurodiversity) in both health and disease. Such progress has not yet, however, propelled changes in educational or medical practices that improve people's lives. We review neuroimaging findings in which initial brain measures (neuromarkers) are correlated with or predict future education, learning, and performance in children and adults; criminality; health-related behaviors; and responses to pharmacological or behavioral treatments. Neuromarkers often provide better predictions (neuroprognosis), alone or in combination with other measures, than traditional behavioral measures. With further advances in study designs and analyses, neuromarkers may offer opportunities to personalize educational and clinical practices that lead to better outcomes for people.

Topics

  • mental-health-psychiatry
  • child-development-education

Lab authors

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