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The Neuropsychoimaging Group studies human brain function during behavior, cognition, and emotion.  Special emphasis is given to drug addiction (crack/cocaine, methamphetamine, alcohol), and other problem behaviors (aggression). Comorbid psychopathology (depression, post traumatic stress disorder, antisocial personality) is also of interest.

Our research is pursued in a multidisciplinary and translational manner.  We perform neuroimaging studies using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), positron emission tomography (PET), and event-related potential (ERP) recordings, and derive measures of brain function: blood oxygen level dependent activation, glucose metabolism, receptor availability and electrical conductivity.  We anchor these results within a behavioral context using neuropsychological assessment techniques. We also use DNA analyses to investigate contribution to results of common gene variations. 

This page will give you an overview of our research approach.  Links in the left-hand frame provide quick jumps to special topics  related to our research areas. 

 

Our research specifically incorporates the cutting-edge imaging technologies available for Medical Research at Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL); we harvest the benefits of developing cross-modality imaging (e.g., simultaneous ERP-fMRI recordings) and sensitive behavioral and neuropsychological assays, thus creating the translational capabilities that are the cornerstone of neuropsychoimaging research.

Our unique toolset includes BNL's 4-Tesla MRI and PET facilities, tailored neuropsychological batteries, Compumedics NeuroSCAN event-related potentials and EEG analyses, and NeuroSCAN STIM and e-Prime experiment presentation software.  All stimulation and assessment systems include specialized modules for examining inhibitory control and reward processing.

The organization of our neuropsychoimaging research is represented by the pyramid above, with its foundation based on cognitive and behavioral measures.  The complementary nature of the interrelationships between the various approaches to studying the behaving human brain are emphasized by the left-sided bi-directional arrow.  

Level I encompasses a broad range of both computerized and paper-and-pencil measures of cognition (attention, memory, inhibitory control, decision-making), emotion and personality (anger, harm avoidance, depression), and behavioral tendencies (e.g., aggression). This broad foundation of tests and measures is selected based on a-priori hypotheses about underlying neural pathways.

Level II provides a platform to test common neuropsychological questions (see below). Here we develop and test new behavioral assays to non-invasively target specific neural networks implicated in the core characteristics of drug addiction and other problem behaviors.

Level III provides more direct, although still correlational, studies of the interplay between behavioral measures (e.g., inhibition of prepotent response tendencies as measured by the Stroop effect, see Goldstein et al., 2001; harm avoidance/fear as measured by MPQ, see Goldstein et al., 2002; and anger as measured by the MMPI, see Goldstein et al., 2005) and their putative neurobiological substrates (e.g., glucose metabolism in the orbitofrontal cortex as measured by PET FDG).

Level IV provides experimental testing of a-priori hypotheses: a well-controlled study (including a control group and a control intervention/condition) is designed for the fMRI, PET, or ERP environment. 

At each level the neuropsychoimaging method can serve both exploratory and confirmatory purposes (e.g., fMRI/PET SPM voxel-by-voxel analyses vs. ROI analyses), depending on the design of the study and data analysis.  Also note that feed-forward and feedback loops between all four levels are essential for our comprehensive research, where we advance the dynamic psychobiological study of human behavior.

Basic Neuropsychological Questions

  • Does drug addiction impair cognitive function? see Goldstein et al., 2004 for documentation of the level of cognitive impairment in drug addiction.

  • Are there associated personality-emotional changes? If so, to what extent?

  • What are the cognitive-behavioral impairments and emotional changes most characteristic of drug (particularly psychostimulant) addiction?

  • Are there differences between the various classes of drugs of addiction in their effects on psychological functioning?

  • What are the similarities with other non-drug forms of addiction (e.g., gambling, obesity)?

  • What is the neurobiological basis of each of these changes? Are there parallel changes in the underlying neural networks that can be mapped/imaged?

Methods

We have designed an extensive neuropsychological battery which is administered to all subjects that participate in our fMRI, ERP, and PET studies (e.g., drug addicted subjects, individuals at-risk for developing drug addiction, healthy controls) to allow for both between- and within-group comparisons. This battery of tests includes:

(1) paper-and-pencil or computerized cognitive-behavioral tasks that assess attention, memory, emotional processing, motor speed, and executive functions (inhibitory control, shifting, planning, reasoning);

(2) self-report measures of emotional states/tendencies and personality traits such as impulsivity, depression, harm avoidance, anger;

(3) newly developed computerized tasks that target the behaviors (e.g., sensitivity to reward, predisposition to aggression) associated with the mesolimbic and mesocortical pathways. See Drug Addiction.

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Last update on: August 21, 2008
Please forward all questions about this site to: Rita Goldstein