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Future Applications of Real-World Neuroimaging to Clinical Psychology

James Crum

2020Psychological Reports18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Clinical neuroimaging has largely been limited to examining the neurophysiological outcomes of treatments for psychiatric conditions rather than the neurocognitive mechanisms by which these outcomes are brought about as a function of clinical strategies, and the cognitive neuroscientific research aiming to investigate these mechanisms in nonclinical and clinical populations has been ecologically challenged by the extent to which tasks represent and generalize to intervention strategies. However, recent technological and methodological advancements to neuroimaging techniques such as functional near-infrared spectroscopy and functional near-infrared spectroscopy-based hyperscanning provide novel opportunities to investigate the mechanisms of change in more naturalistic and interactive settings, representing a unique prospect for improving our understanding of the intra- and interbrain systems supporting the recogitation of dysfunctional cognitive operations.

Topics & Concepts

NeuroimagingNeurocognitivePsychologyFunctional neuroimagingFunctional near-infrared spectroscopyCognitionDysfunctional familyIntervention (counseling)Cognitive neuroscienceCognitive psychologyCognitive scienceNeuroscienceClinical psychologyPsychiatryPrefrontal cortexOptical Imaging and Spectroscopy TechniquesFunctional Brain Connectivity StudiesEEG and Brain-Computer Interfaces