Neuroscientific Exploration of Cultural Protective Factors in American Indians
Project Number5R00MD015736-05
Former Number4K99MD015736-03
Contact PI/Project LeaderWHITE, EVAN JAMES
Awardee OrganizationLAUREATE INSTITUTE FOR BRAIN RESEARCH
Description
Abstract Text
PROJECT SUMMARY
American Indian (AI) populations have had the largest increase in suicide rates of any ethnic group in that past
decade and have high rates of mental health concerns such as post-traumatic stress, substance use, anxiety,
and mood disorders. However, previous research and preliminary analyses demonstrated that AIs actually
display lower levels of mental health concerns than broader populations when accounting for increased levels
of risk factors, (e.g., trauma exposure). Extant literature indicates that factors associated with AI culture are
protective against poor mental health. Yet, little is known about how cultural factors (e.g., enculturation, social
support) play a protective role. There are no published studies examining neural underpinnings of the
protective role of AI cultural factors. Filling this gap is a critical step in supporting an experimental therapeutics
approach to developing culturally informed prevention and intervention efforts. Cognitive control is a
neurocognitive function that is implicated across numerous psychiatric disorders, can be assessed with
validated behavioral and neuroimaging tasks, and has been well-delineated in regard to underlying neural
circuitry. The aims of the proposal are to (a) determine whether cultural protective factors relate to behavioral
and neural indicators of cognitive control, as measured during electroencephalography and functional magnetic
resonance imaging and (b) develop an experimental, cultural identification paradigm to serve as the basis for
future culturally-informed neuroscientific research and intervention/prevention efforts.
A community based participatory research (CBPR) framework will be used to recruit participants who have
completed multimodal neural and behavioral indicators of cognitive control, clinical interviews, self-report
measures of psychopathology symptoms and global functioning as part of a previous study. They will complete
self-report measures of enculturation, social support, global functioning and a cultural enhancement induction
paradigm developed using a CBPR framework. These data will provide an essential foundation for developing
culturally informed, evidence-based intervention and prevention efforts aimed at reducing the mental health
disparities among AIs. The proposed training plan will expand Dr. White expertise in neuroscientific
mechanisms of cognitive control through mentorship, coursework, and hands-on training in advanced statistical
methods, multimodal (EEG/fMRI) neuroimaging, clinical neuroscience, and culturally informed research. He
has assembled a team of mentors well suited to provide the required diversity of expertise he needs to achieve
independence. Dr. Martin Paulus will provide expertise neuroimaging and advanced data analytic expertise.
Dr. Aupperle will bring extensive experience related to neuroimaging and clinically relevant neuroscience
approaches. Dr. Lowe will provide expertise and experiences in AI culturally informed research. The training
and associated research will be conducted at LIBR, a state-of-the-art institute dedicated to neuroimaging
research aimed at developing more effective treatments for neuropsychiatric disorders.
Public Health Relevance Statement
PROJECT NARRATIVE
American Indians (AIs) display high rates of mental health difficulties; however, evidence indicates that when
accounting for socio-cultural and demographic risk factors AIs appear resilient to mental health concerns.
Although specific factors associated with AI culture have been identified as protective, there is a lack of
research aimed at understanding behavioral and neural underpinnings of these protective effects. The primary
aim of this work is to establish (1) brain and behavior responses that characterize the cultural protective factors
among AIs and (2) an experimental, cultural identification paradigm to serve as the basis for future culturally
informed neuroscientific research and intervention/prevention efforts.
NIH Spending Category
No NIH Spending Category available.
Project Terms
AccountingAddressAmerican Indian PopulationAmerican IndiansAmygdaloid structureAnxiety DisordersBehavioralBrainBuffersCharacteristicsClinicalCognitiveCorpus striatum structureDataData AnalyticsDedicationsDemographic FactorsDiagnosisDiscriminationEnvironmentEthnic PopulationEvent-Related PotentialsEvidence based interventionExhibitsFeedbackFoundationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance ImagingFutureGoalsImageIndividualInferior frontal gyrusInterventionInterviewInvestigational TherapiesLinkLiteratureMeasuresMental HealthMental disordersMentorsMentorshipMood DisordersNational Institute of General Medical SciencesNeurocognitiveNeuropsychologyNeurosciencesOutcomeOutcome MeasureParticipantPatient RecruitmentsPatient Self-ReportPerformancePersonal SatisfactionPhasePlayPopulationPost-Traumatic Stress DisordersPrefrontal CortexPreventionProcessPsychopathologyPublishingRandomizedResearchRewardsRiskRisk FactorsRoleSamplingSelf EfficacySignal TransductionSocial supportStatistical MethodsStressSuicideSymptomsTrainingTraumaTribesWorkbehavioral responseblood oxygenation level dependent responseclinically relevantcognitive controlcognitive enhancementcommunity based participatory researchdisease modeleffective therapyemotion regulationemotional functioningexperiencefamily structurefunctional magnetic resonance imaging/electroencephalographyhealth disparitymultimodalityneuralneural circuitneuroimagingneuromechanismneuropsychiatric disordernovelpost-traumatic stressprecision medicineprimary outcomeprotective effectprotective factorsrecruitresilienceresilience factorresponsereward processingsecondary outcomesocial culturesubstance usesuicidal risksuicide ratetrauma exposure
National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities
CFDA Code
307
DUNS Number
967230579
UEI
MX8ULDF6SDD6
Project Start Date
27-December-2020
Project End Date
30-November-2025
Budget Start Date
01-December-2024
Budget End Date
30-November-2025
Project Funding Information for 2025
Total Funding
$156,271
Direct Costs
$102,250
Indirect Costs
$70,041
Year
Funding IC
FY Total Cost by IC
2025
National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities
$156,271
Year
Funding IC
FY Total Cost by IC
Sub Projects
No Sub Projects information available for 5R00MD015736-05
Publications
Publications are associated with projects, but cannot be identified with any particular year of the project or fiscal year of funding. This is due to the continuous and cumulative nature of knowledge generation across the life of a project and the sometimes long and variable publishing timeline. Similarly, for multi-component projects, publications are associated with the parent core project and not with individual sub-projects.
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