CORE 3 will utilize the Caltech Psychological Assessment Laboratory (PAL), whose mission is to provide recruitment and comprehensive, centralized testing of human research participants on psychological measures. Currently the PAL provides one day per week for obtaining measures of cognitive abilities, personality traits, psychiatric history, and psychosocial background, as part of the Caltech Brain Imaging Center. Researchers at Caltech use this information for inclusion and exclusion screening, for statistical use as covariates in group analyses, and for statistical comparison across subjects in research studies that investigate individual differences. This scope will be expanded for the Projects in the Conte Center, all of which include Aims regarding individual differences, and all of which rely on adequate recruitment, screening, and characterization of research participants. Thus, Core 3, like Core 2, will leverage an existing mechanism to enable a critical service for all of the four scientific Projects of the Center. Core 3 will not provide any clinical services. Core 3 will be directed by Dr. Lynn Paul, a licensed clinical psychologist;Dr. Ralph Adolphs will be a co-Pl. There are four Aims: subject recruitment;subject screening;basic psychological assessment (including demographics, IQ, basic perception);and assessment of problem solving skills relevant to the experiments described under the Projects (reasoning, logic, sophistication in math).

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
Type
Specialized Center (P50)
Project #
5P50MH094258-03
Application #
8661302
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZMH1)
Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
2014-05-01
Budget End
2015-04-30
Support Year
3
Fiscal Year
2014
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
California Institute of Technology
Department
Type
DUNS #
City
Pasadena
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
91125
Kliemann, Dorit; Adolphs, Ralph (2018) The social neuroscience of mentalizing: challenges and recommendations. Curr Opin Psychol 24:1-6
Rutishauser, Ueli; Aflalo, Tyson; Rosario, Emily R et al. (2018) Single-Neuron Representation of Memory Strength and Recognition Confidence in Left Human Posterior Parietal Cortex. Neuron 97:209-220.e3
Pauli, Wolfgang M; Nili, Amanda N; Tyszka, J Michael (2018) A high-resolution probabilistic in vivo atlas of human subcortical brain nuclei. Sci Data 5:180063
Bowren, Mark D; Croft, Katie E; Reber, Justin et al. (2018) Choosing spouses and houses: Impaired congruence between preference and choice following damage to the ventromedial prefrontal cortex. Neuropsychology 32:280-303
Lin, Chujun; Adolphs, Ralph; Alvarez, R Michael (2018) Inferring Whether Officials Are Corruptible From Looking at Their Faces. Psychol Sci 29:1807-1823
Dubois, Julien; Galdi, Paola; Han, Yanting et al. (2018) Resting-state functional brain connectivity best predicts the personality dimension of openness to experience. Personal Neurosci 1:
Adolphs, Ralph; Gläscher, Jan; Tranel, Daniel (2018) Searching for the neural causes of criminal behavior. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 115:451-452
Wang, Oliver; Lee, Sang Wan; O'Doherty, John et al. (2018) Model-based and model-free pain avoidance learning. Brain Neurosci Adv 2:2398212818772964
Charpentier, Caroline J; O'Doherty, John P (2018) The application of computational models to social neuroscience: promises and pitfalls. Soc Neurosci 13:637-647
Tusche, Anita; Hutcherson, Cendri A (2018) Cognitive regulation alters social and dietary choice by changing attribute representations in domain-general and domain-specific brain circuits. Elife 7:

Showing the most recent 10 out of 158 publications