Developing the Context-Aware Multimodal Ecological Research and Assessment (CAMERA) Platform for Continuous Measurement and Prediction of Anxiety and Memory State

  • Jacobs, Joshua J. (PI)
  • Widge, Alik S (CoPI)
  • Youngerman, Brett E. (CoPI)
  • Ortiz, Jorge J (CoPI)

Project: Research project

Project Details

Description

Summary/Abstract (30 line max): This project seeks to develop the CAMERA (Context-Aware Multimodal Ecological Research and Assessment) platform, a state-of-the-art open multimodal hardware/software system for measuring human brain–behavior relationships. CAMERA will record neural, physiological, behavioral, and environmental signals, as well as measurements from ecological momentary assessments (EMAs), to develop a continuous high-resolution prediction of a person’s level of anxiety and cognitive performance. CAMERA will provide a significant advance over current methods for human behavioral measurement because it leverages the complementary features of multimodal data sources and combines them with interpretable machine learning to predict human behavior. A further distinctive aspect of CAMERA is that it incorporates context-aware, adaptive EMA, where the timing of assessments depend on the subject’s physiology and behavior to improve response rates and model learning. Our initial work on CAMERA focuses on predicting anxiety state and concurrent memory performance, but the platform is flexible for use in various domains. Our work on CAMERA consists of two phases. First, in the R61 phase, we will develop the CAMERA hardware/software framework, which includes methods for recording continuous neural, physiologic, audiovisual, and smartphone-usage data (Aim 1) and synchronizing these signals with intermittent EMAs (Aim 2). After demonstrating that CAMERA can successfully combine multimodal features to predict a subject’s anxiety state and memory efficiency (Aim 3), we will proceed to the R33 phase of the project. In the R33, we will use CAMERA in conjunction with closed-loop neurostimulation to modulate the subject’s anxiety state and associated memory performance (Aim 1), and to characterize the causal effect of modulation on neural, physiologic, and behavioral biomarkers (Aim 2). Beyond our initial work in the domain of anxiety and memory, we anticipate that CAMERA will have widespread impact by providing a general platform for exploratory and hypothesis-driven research on various aspects of complex human internal states, behavior, and cognition in real-world environments while minimizing burden on subjects.
StatusActive
Effective start/end date1/1/2412/31/24

Funding

  • National Institute of Mental Health: $1,079,407.00

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