An Open, Fully-processed, Longitudinal Data Resource to Study Brain Development and Transdiagnostic Executive Function

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Abstract

Executive function (EF) develops rapidly during adolescence. However, deficits in EF also emerge in adolescence, representing a transdiagnostic symptom associated with many forms of psychopathology. To promote transdiagnostic research on EF during development, we introduce a new data resource – the Penn Longitudinal Executive functioning in Adolescent Development study (Penn LEAD) – that combines longitudinal multi-modal imaging data with rich clinical and cognitive phenotyping. These data include 225 imaging sessions from 132 individuals (8-16 years old at the time of enrollment) who are typically developing (27.3%), or meet criteria for attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (20.5%) or the psychosis-spectrum (52.3%). In addition to phenotypic data from multiple cognitive tasks focused on EF, the study includes data from structural MRI, diffusion MRI, n -back task fMRI, resting-state fMRI, and arterial spin-labeled MRI. Notably, all raw data, fully-processed derived data, and detailed quality control recommendations are publicly shared on OpenNeuro. We anticipate that such analysis-ready data will accelerate research on EF development in psychiatry.

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