Pubdate: Thu, 01 Oct 2015 Source: San Diego Union Tribune (CA) Copyright: 2015 Union-Tribune Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.utsandiego.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/386 Note: Seldom prints LTEs from outside it's circulation area. Author: Gary Robbins UCSD STUDY TO PROBE MYSTERY OF TEENS' BRAINS University to oversee effort to understand adolescent behavior UC San Diego will oversee one of the largest studies ever about the brains of adolescents, hoping to figure out why some youngsters lead healthy lives while others develop substance-abuse problems and mental-health disorders. Academic centers across the country will recruit more than 10,000 students ages 9 and 10 for a study that could last a decade. The main goal: to gain a better understanding of one of the least scientifically understood segments of the population. "The study represents an unprecedented opportunity to closely monitor adolescents with the most sophisticated technology that we've developed in the last decade," said Terry Jernigan, director of UC San Diego's Center for Human Development. "We're going to get very rich data that we will be sharing with other academic institutions within the first year of the program." She and her colleagues from 20 institutions intend to look at the study participants' physical well-being, educational experiences, recreational activities, other social interactions, cognitive function and emotional health, among other categories. They plan to do so using behavioral monitoring, DNA analysis and high-resolution brain scans. Their work will be funded by the National Institutes of Health, which might end up spending as much as $300 million on the project. The agency has so far committed $150 million to the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development, or ABCD, study. UC San Diego will receive $32 million of that money. Scientists used to believe that people's brains reached maturity by the time they graduated from high school. Researchers now believe that most brains don't fully develop until about age 25. Despite such progress in gauging the brain's maturation, neurologists, sociologists, psychologists and others still have an incomplete picture of how the brains of adolescents develop - and how those changes influence things such as moods, self-centeredness, communication patterns and decision-making. Scientists also are struggling to comprehend how genetics and environment influence adolescents' behavior and performance in a variety of settings. Students in the ABCD study will undergo cognitive tests that measure a broad range of characteristics, including language skills, the ability to solve problems and attitudes toward rebelling or taking risks. They will also provide DNA samples that can be stored for future genomic analysis. Many participants will be asked to wear wireless devices that measure things such as heart rates and sleep patterns, and they'll undergo brain scanning to measure how the biology and the function of their brains evolve over time. Researchers said they will monitor participants' behavior on Facebook, Twitter and other social-media platforms. Dozens of scientists are involved in the project, including those based at research schools such as Cornell University, Washington University in St. Louis and the University of Pittsburgh. "I think it's so important that we're addressing a period of development when there's a peak in problems like mental illness and substance abuse," said B.J. Casey, a developmental psychobiologist at Cornell's Weill Medical College. "The brain is more plastic than it will be going forward. The things we learn could help prevent mental illness and improve people's lives," she said. At UC San Diego, Jernigan will coordinate the ABCD study with Sandra Brown, the university's vice chancellor for research. To help manage the project, UC San Diego said it will establish an interdisciplinary institute dedicated to childhood neurodevelopment. That institute will draw researchers from throughout the school: cognitive science, psychology, psychiatry, neurosciences, radiology, bioengineering, family medicine, public health, sociology and political science. The project's data and informatics center will be located at UC San Diego and run by Anders Dale, a prominent neuroscientist. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom