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2019 journal perspective Psychiatric Annals

Will Neuroimaging Produce a Clinical Tool for Psychiatry?

Satrajit Ghosh, Justin T. Baker

Identifiers and access

DOI
10.3928/00485713-20190412-01
Cited by
1

Key findings

This article reviews how 20 years of neuroimaging — combined with computational advances and population imaging projects — have prepared the field for a first clinical neuroimaging tool in psychiatry, while detailing social, technical, educational, and policy changes still needed for translation.

Abstract

Source: openalex

The increasing incidence, awareness, and social and economic impact of mental health disorders, the current status quo of treatment options and their limited success, and the extensive investment into brain imaging research raises an important question for the future of behavioral medicine: will neuroimaging produce a clinical tool for psychiatry? Significant advances in neuroimaging over the past 2 decades have allowed psychiatric clinicians to peer into the living, functioning brain. Neuroimaging has been used to diagnose mental illnesses, predict treatment outcomes, find new stratifications of psychiatric disorders, and provide therapy. The development of computational techniques, alongside several population neuroimaging efforts worldwide, increase the prospect for the first neuroimaging-based clinical tool. In this article, we describe the formidable challenges to creating such a tool and forecast how current institutions can solve them through social, technical, educational, and policy changes; improving data sharing practices; advances in technology; and integration between neuroimaging and other emerging information streams. [ Psychiatr Ann. 2019;49(5):209–214.]

Topics

  • mental-health-psychiatry
  • neuroimaging-methods

Lab authors

This record was curated from the lab's CV, NCBI MyBibliography, and OpenAlex. See PROJECTS.md for how to add or correct an entry via a pull request.