Abstract
Objective: Databases bring together diverse information in neuroimaging and psychiatry. They usually aim for both size and diversity of measures. The present article outlines the potential insights from the first entirely standardized and centralized International Brain Database. Method: The database consists of data from over 1000 normal subjects (age range 6-70 years) and a growing number of age-matched patients with a psychiatric illness, acquired from seven laboratories (New York, Rhode Island, London, Holland, Adelaide, Melbourne and Sydney). It is an ‘integrative’ neuroimaging (electroencephalography (EEG), event-related potentials (ERP), structural and functional magnetic resonance imaging (sMRI, fMRI)), psychometric, demographic and genomic database. Results: The most notable relationships in normal controls thus far include (i) an association between grey matter volume and EEG alpha frequency in frontal regions; (ii) a systematic reduction with age in cortical arousal (EEG power), speed of processing (ERP components) and most aspects of cognitive function, particularly for >50 years; (iii) a greater cortical arousal in female versus male subjects, but slower speed of processing; and (iv) a dissociation between speed (greater in male subjects) and accuracy/verbal processing (greater in female subjects) for psychological tasks. There is potential to explore the specificity of findings in psychiatric disorders in this international standardized database. Conclusions: The size of this database has allowed for statistical tests of greater power than normal. The combination of size and diversity of measure has broader significance in providing a normative framework for evidence-based psychiatric research. It enables control for widespread individual differences, enhancing investigations of the sensitivity and specificity of brain findings, and the efficacy of medication in psychiatric disorders.