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Wearable Optical Imaging for Probing Brain Functioning in the Wild

2:35 pm - 2:50 pm

In the past three decades, functional MRI (fMRI) has become the gold standard for noninvasive, in vivo mapping of brain function in humans. However, despite its substantial research utility and billions of dollars of federal investment, fMRI has yet to make its way into mainstream mental health clinics. This is mainly driven by the lack of reproducibility of fMRI findings at the individual level due to the suboptimal measurement reliability of short-quantity fMRI recordings. Here, I discuss:

1. The roadblocks in clinical translation of fMRI for informing and diagnosis of mental illnesses.

2. The need for low-cost, wearable electronics to facilitate dense sampling of brain functioning in ecologically valid settings in patients with mental illnesses

3. Our attempt toward developing a very low-cost wearable brain imaging system that can be used at home for probing brain dysfunction in patients with mental illnesses.

Featured Speakers

Hadi Hosseini

Hadi Hosseini

Assistant Professor Stanford University School of Medicine

Speaker