Utilizing CentileBrain Models in Clinical Research: Case Example in Clinical High Risk for Psychosis
Wed, Jan 17
|Virtual Event
This 1-hour presentation will cover the following points: 1. How CentileBrain can be applied to clinical samples to quantify deviations from normative ranges of neuroanatomical variation; 2. How to compute summary metrics of deviation; 3. How to link deviations with behavior & psychopathology.


Time & Location
Jan 17, 2024, 8:30 a.m. PST
Virtual Event
Guests
About the event
Utilizing CentileBrain Models in Clinical Research: Case Example in Clinical High Risk for PsychosisTopic:
January 17, 2024 08:30 AM Pacific Time (US and Canada)Time:
The detailed Zoom meeting information will be provided in the email upon completion of your registration with your email address.
The CentileBrain models were created through the analysis of regional morphometric data from more than 37,000 healthy individuals across the lifespan. These models have the potential for application to clinical samples to understand deviation in regional and global brain morphometry.
In this event, Dr. Ruiyang Ge will briefly introduce the CentileBrain model. Then, Dr. Shalaila Haas will present findings from the first clinical application of the CentileBrain models to a large multi-site cohort of individuals at clinical high risk for psychosis in collaboration with the ENIGMA Clinical High Risk for Psychosis Working Group (), and provide details on ways to compute summary metrics of morphometric deviations…