論文

査読有り 国際誌
2019年5月

Population-neuroscience study of the Tokyo TEEN Cohort (pn-TTC): Cohort longitudinal study to explore the neurobiological substrates of adolescent psychological and behavioral development.

Psychiatry and clinical neurosciences
  • Naohiro Okada
  • Shuntaro Ando
  • Motoyuki Sanada
  • Sachiko Hirata-Mogi
  • Yudai Iijima
  • Hiroshi Sugiyama
  • Toru Shirakawa
  • Mika Yamagishi
  • Akiko Kanehara
  • Masaya Morita
  • Tomoko Yagi
  • Noriyuki Hayashi
  • Daisuke Koshiyama
  • Kentaro Morita
  • Kingo Sawada
  • Tempei Ikegame
  • Noriko Sugimoto
  • Rie Toriyama
  • Mio Masaoka
  • Shinya Fujikawa
  • Sho Kanata
  • Mariko Tada
  • Kenji Kirihara
  • Noriaki Yahata
  • Tsuyoshi Araki
  • Seiichiro Jinde
  • Yukiko Kano
  • Shinsuke Koike
  • Kaori Endo
  • Syudo Yamasaki
  • Atsushi Nishida
  • Mariko Hiraiwa-Hasegawa
  • Miki Bundo
  • Kazuya Iwamoto
  • Saori C Tanaka
  • Kiyoto Kasai
  • 全て表示

73
5
開始ページ
231
終了ページ
242
記述言語
英語
掲載種別
研究論文(学術雑誌)
DOI
10.1111/pcn.12814

AIM: Adolescence is a crucial stage of psychological development and is critically vulnerable to the onset of psychopathology. Our understanding of how the maturation of endocrine, epigenetics, and brain circuit may underlie psychological development in adolescence, however, has not been integrated. Here, we introduce our research project, the population-neuroscience study of the Tokyo TEEN Cohort (pn-TTC), a longitudinal study to explore the neurobiological substrates of development during adolescence. METHODS: Participants in the first wave of the pn-TTC (pn-TTC-1) study were recruited from those of the TTC study, a large-scale epidemiological survey in which 3171 parent-adolescent pairs were recruited from the general population. Participants underwent psychological, cognitive, sociological, and physical assessment. Moreover, adolescents and their parents underwent magnetic resonance imaging (MRI; structural MRI, resting-state functional MRI, and magnetic resonance spectroscopy), and adolescents provided saliva samples for hormone analysis and for DNA analysis including epigenetics. Furthermore, the second wave (pn-TTC-2) followed similar methods as in the first wave. RESULTS: A total of 301 parent-adolescent pairs participated in the pn-TTC-1 study. Moreover, 281 adolescents participated in the pn-TTC-2 study, 238 of whom were recruited from the pn-TTC-1 sample. The instruction for data request is available at: http://value.umin.jp/data-resource.html. CONCLUSION: The pn-TTC project is a large-scale and population-neuroscience-based survey with a plan of longitudinal biennial follow up. Through this approach we seek to elucidate adolescent developmental mechanisms according to biopsychosocial models. This current biomarker research project, using minimally biased samples recruited from the general population, has the potential to expand the new research field of population neuroscience.

リンク情報
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/pcn.12814
PubMed
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30588712
ID情報
  • DOI : 10.1111/pcn.12814
  • ISSN : 1323-1316
  • PubMed ID : 30588712

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