Pnas 1718418115 Sapp
Pnas 1718418115 Sapp
Pnas 1718418115 Sapp
Xiang-Zhen Kong (1), Samuel R. Mathias (2), Tulio Guadalupe (1), Christoph Abé (3), Ingrid Agartz (4,5,6), Theophilus N. Akudjedu (7),
Andre Aleman (8), Saud Alhusaini (9,10), Nicholas B. Allen (11,12), David Ames (13,14), Ole A. Andreassen (15), Alejandro Arias
Vasquez (16,17,18,19), Nicola J. Armstrong (20), Felipe Bergo (21), Mark E. Bastin (22,23), Albert Batalla (24), Jochen Bauer (25),
Bernhard T Baune (26), Ramona Baur-Streubel (27), Joseph Biederman (28,29), Sara K. Blaine (2), Premika Boedhoe (30,31,32), Erlend
Bøen (6), Anushree Bose (33), Janita Bralten (16,34), Daniel Brandeis (35,36,37,38), Silvia Brem (35,36), Henry Brodaty (39,40), Dilara
Yüksel (41), Samantha J. Brooks (42), Jan Buitelaar (34,43,44), Christian Bürger (45), Robin Bülow (46), Vince Calhoun (47,48), Anna
Calvo (49,50), Erick Jorge Canales-Rodríguez (51,52,53,54), Jose M. Canive (55), Dara M. Cannon (7), Elisabeth C. Caparelli (56),
Francisco X. Castellanos (57,58), Gianpiero L. Cavalleri (9), Fernando Cendes (21), Tiffany Moukbel Chaim-Avancini (59,60), Kaylita
Chantiluke (61), Qun-lin Chen (62,63), Xiayu Chen (64), Yuqi Cheng (65), Anastasia Christakou (66,67), Vincent P. Clark (47,68), David
Coghill (69,70), Colm G. Connolly (71,72), Annette Conzelmann (73), Aldo Córdova-Palomera (74), Janna Cousijn (75), Tim Crow (76),
Ana Cubillo (61), Anders Dale (77,78), Udo Dannlowski (45), Sara Ambrosino de Bruttopilo (79), Patrick de Zeeuw (79), Ian J. Deary (80),
Norman Delanty (9), Damion V. Demeter (81), Adriana Di Martino (57), Erin W Dickie (82), Bruno Dietsche (41), N. Trung Doan (74),
Colin P. Doherty (83), Alysa Doyle (84,85), Sarah Durston (79), Eric Earl (81), Stefan Ehrlich (86), Carl Johan Ekman (3), Torbjørn
Elvsåshagen (87,88), Jeffery N. Epstein (89,90), Damien A. Fair (91,92,93), Stephen V. Faraone (94,95), Guillén Fernández (96,18), Geraldo
Busatto Filho (59,60), Katharina Förster (45,97), Jean-Paul Fouche (98), John J. Foxe (99), Thomas Frodl (100), Paola Fuentes-Claramonte
(51,52), Janice Fullerton (101,102), Hugh Garavan (103), Danielle do Santos Garcia (104), Ian H. Gotlib (105), Anna E. Goudriaan
(106,107), Hans Jörgen Grabe (108,109), Nynke A. Groenewold (110), Dominik Grotegerd (45), Oliver Gruber (111), Tiril Gurholt (4), Jan
Haavik (94,112), Tim Hahn (45), Narelle K. Hansell (113), Mathew A. Harris (22,114), Catharina A. Hartman (115), Maria del Carmen
Valdés Hernández (22,23), Dirk Heslenfeld (116,117), Robert Hester (118), Derrek Paul Hibar (119), Beng-Choon Ho (120), Tiffany C. Ho
(72,121), Pieter J. Hoekstra (122), Ruth J. van Holst (123,124), Martine Hoogman (16,34), Marie F. Høvik (125,125), Fleur M. Howells (42),
Kenneth Hugdahl (112,126), Chaim Huyser (127,128), Martin Ingvar (3), Lourdes Irwin (129), Akari Ishikawa (104), Anthony James (130),
Neda Jahanshad (119), Terry L. Jernigan (131,132), Erik G Jönsson (133,5), Claas Kähler (45), Vasily Kaleda (134), Clare Kelly
(135,136,137,138), Michael Kerich (139), Matcheri S. Keshavan (140), Sabin Khadka (141), Tilo Kircher (41), Gregor Kohls (142), Kerstin
Konrad (142), Ozlem Korucuoglu (143), Bernd Krämer (111), Axel Krug (41), Jun Soo Kwon (144,145), Nanda Lambregts-Rommelse
(17,43), Mikael Landén (146,5), Luisa Lázaro (147,148,149,150), Irina Lebedeva (134), Rhoshel Lenroot (151,152,153), Klaus-Peter Lesch
(154,155,156), Qinqin Li (157), Kelvin O. Lim (158), Jia Liu (157), Christine Lochner (159), Edythe D. London (160), Vera Lonning (4),
Valentina Lorenzetti (161), Michelle Luciano (80), Maartje Luijten (162), Astri J. Lundervold (94,126), Scott Mackey (103), Frank P.
MacMaster (163,164,165,166,167), Sophie Maingault (168), Charles B. Malpas (169), Ulrik F. Malt (170,171), David Mataix-Cols (5),
Rocio Martin-Santos (172), Andrew R. Mayer (47), Hazel McCarthy (173), Philip B. Mitchell (151,174,175), Bryon A. Mueller (158),
Susana Muñoz Maniega (22,23), Bernard Mazoyer (176), Colm McDonald (7), Quinn McLellan (177,178), Katie L. McMahon (179),
Genevieve McPhilemy (7), Reza Momenan (139), Angelica M. Morales (160), Janardhanan C. Narayanaswamy (33), José Carlos Vasques
Moreira (104), Stener Nerland (6), Liam Nestor (180), Erik Newman (132), Joel T. Nigg (129), Jan Egil Nordvik (181), Stephanie Novotny
(141), Eileen Oberwelland Weiss (142), Ruth L. O’Gorman (182,37), Jaap Oosterlaan (183,184,185), Bob Oranje (79), Catherine Orr (103),
Bronwyn Overs (101), Paul Pauli (27), Martin Paulus (186,187), Kerstin Jessica Plessen (94,188), Georg G. von Polier (142), Edith Pomarol-
Clotet (51,52), Maria J. Portella (189), Jiang Qiu (62,63), Joaquim Radua (51,52,190,191), Josep Antoni Ramos-Quiroga (192,193), Y.C.
Janardhan Reddy (33), Andreas Reif (194), Gloria Roberts (151,174), Pedro Rosa (59,60), Katya Rubia (61), Matthew D. Sacchet (195),
Perminder S. Sachdev (39,196), Raymond Salvador (51,52), Lianne Schmaal (11,197,30), Martin Schulte-Rüther (142,198), Lizanne
Schweren (122), Larry Seidman (28,140), Jochen Seitz (199), Mauricio Henriques Serpa (59,60), Philip Shaw (200,201), Elena Shumskaya
(16,34), Timothy J. Silk (169,202,203), Alan N. Simmons (204,205), Egle Simulionyte (111), Rajita Sinha (2), Zsuzsika Sjoerds (206,207),
Runar Elle Smelror (4), Joan Carlos Soliva (192), Nadia Solowij (208), Fabio Luisde Souza-Duran (59,60), Scott R. Sponheim (209), Dan J.
Stein (42,210), Elliot A. Stein (56), Michael Stevens (211,212,213), Lachlan T. Strike (113), Gustavo Sudre (200), Jing Sui (47,214), Leanne
Tamm (215), Hendrik S. Temmingh (42), Robert J. Thoma (216,217), Alexander Tomyshev (134), Giulia Tronchin (7), Jessica Turner (218),
Anne Uhlmann (159,42,103), Theo G.M. van Erp (219), Odile A. van den Heuvel (30,31,32), Dennis van der Meer (220), Liza van Eijk
(221,113), Alasdair Vance (222), Ilya M. Veer (223), Dick J. Veltman (30), Ganesan Venkatasubramanian (33), Oscar Vilarroya (192,224),
Yolanda Vives-Gilabert (225), Aristotle N Voineskos (82,226), Henry Völzke (227,228,229), Daniella Vuletic (42), Susanne Walitza
(35,36,37), Henrik Walter (223), Esther Walton (230), Joanna M. Wardlaw (231,232,233), Wei Wen (39), Lars T. Westlye (234,235),
Christopher D. Whelan (9), Tonya White (236,237), Reinout W. Wiers (75), Margaret J. Wright (113,179), Katharina Wittfeld (109,108),
Tony T. Yang (72), Clarissa L. Yasuda (104), Yuliya Yoncheva (57), Murat Yücel (238), Je-Yeon Yun (239,240), Marcus Vinicius Zanetti
(59,60), Zonglei Zhen (64), Xing-xing Zhu (62,63), Georg C. Ziegler (154), Kathrin Zierhut (27), Greig I. de Zubicaray (241), Marcel Zwiers
(34), Karolinska Schizophrenia Project (KaSP) (242), David C. Glahn (2,243), Barbara Franke (244,245), Fabrice Crivello (176), Nathalie
Tzourio-Mazoyer (176), Simon E. Fisher (1,246), Paul M. Thompson (119), Clyde Francks (1,246)
1. Language and Genetics Department, Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
2. Department of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA.
4. Norwegian Centre for Mental Disorders Research (NORMENT), K. G. Jebsen Centre for Psychosis Research, Institute of Clinical
Medicine, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway.
5. Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Centre for Psychiatry Research, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.
www.pnas.org/cgi/doi/10.1073/pnas.1718418115
6. Department of Psychiatric Research, Diakonhjemmet Hospital, Oslo, Norway.
7. The Centre for Neuroimaging & Cognitive Genomics (NICOG), Clinical Neuroimaging Lab, NCBES Galway Neuroscience Centre,
College of Medicine, Nursing, and Health Sciences, National University of Ireland Galway, H91 TK33 Galway Ireland, Republic of Ireland.
8. BCN Neuroimaging Center, Department of Neuroscience, University Medical Center Groningen, University of Groningen, The
Netherlands.
9. Department of Molecular and Cellular Therapeutics, Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, Dublin, Ireland.
10. Neurology and Neurosurgery Department, Montreal Neurological Hospital and Institute, McGill University, Montreal, Canada.
11. Orygen, The National Centre of Excellence in Youth Mental Health, Parkville, Australia.
14. Academic Unit for Psychiatry of Old Age, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia.
15. Norwegian Centre for Mental Disorders Research (NORMENT), KG Jebsen Centre for Psychosis Research, Division of Mental Health
and Addiction, Oslo University Hospital & Institute of Clinical Medicine, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway.
16. Department of Human Genetics, Radboud University Medical Center, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
17. Department of Psychiatry, Radboud University Medical Center, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
18. Department of Cognitive Neuroscience, Radboud University Medical Center, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
19. Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, Radboud University, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
22. Centre for Clinical Brain Sciences, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK.
24. Department of Psychiatry, Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, Radboud University Medical Centre, Nijmegen, The
Netherlands.
29. Clinical and Research Programs in Pediatric Psychopharmacology and Adult ADHD, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA,
USA.
31. Department of Anatomy & Neurosciences, VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
33. Department of Psychiatry, National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences, Bengaluru, India.
34. Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
35. Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, University Hospital of Psychiatry Zurich, University of Zurich,
Zurich, Switzerland.
36. Neuroscience Center Zurich, University of Zurich and ETH Zurich, Switzerland.
37. Zurich Center for Integrative Human Physiology, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
38. Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Central Institute of Mental Health, Medical Faculty
Mannheim/Heidelberg University, J5, 68159 Mannheim, Germany.
39. Centre for Healthy Brain Ageing, School of Psychiatry, UNSW Australia.
40. Dementia Collaborative Research Centre ØC Assessment and Better Care, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia.
41. Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Philipps-University Marburg, Germany.
42. Department of Psychiatry and Mental Health, University of Cape Town, South Africa.
46. Department of Diagnostic Radiology and Neuroradiology, University Medicine Greifswald, Greifswald, Germany.
48. Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM 87131, United States.
49. Medical Image Core Facility, August Pi I Sunyer Biomedical Research Institute (IDIBAPS), Barcelona, Spain.
50. CIBERBBN.
53. Department of Radiology, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Vaudois (CHUV), Lausanne, Switzerland.
54. Signal Processing Laboratory 5 (LTS5), École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Lausanne, Switzerland.
56. Neuroimaging Research Branch, National Institute on Drug Abuse, National Institutes of Health, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
57. Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Hassenfeld Children's Hospital at NYU Langone, New York, USA.
58. Division of Clinical Research, Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research, Orangeburg, NY, USA.
59. Department of Psychiatry, Faculty of Medicine, University of São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil.
60. Center for Interdisciplinary Research on Applied Neurosciences (NAPNA), University of São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil.
61. King's College London, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, London,
UK.
63. Key Laboratory of Cognition and Personality, Ministry of Education, Chongqing, China.
64. State Key Laboratory of Cognitive Neuroscience and Learning & IDG/McGovern Institute for Brain Research, Faculty of Psychology,
Beijing Normal University, Beijing, China.
65. Department of Psychiatry, First Affiliated Hospital of Kunming Medical University, Kunming, China.
66. Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Institute of Psychiatry, King's College London, London WC2R 2LS, UK.
67. School of Psychology and Clinical Language Sciences, University of Reading, Reading RG6 6AL, UK.
68. Department of Psychology, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM 87131, United States.
70. Division of Neuroscience, Ninewells Hospital and Medical School, University of Dundee.
71. Department of Biomedical Sciences, Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL 32306, USA.
72. Department of Psychiatry, Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, and Weill Institute for Neurosciences, University of California,
San Francisco, 401 Parnassus Avenue, San Francisco, CA, USA.
73. Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, University of Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany.
74. Norwegian Centre for Mental Disorder Research (NORMENT), K.G. Jebsen Centre for Psychosis Research, Division of Mental Health
and Addiction, Oslo University Hospital & Institute of Clinical Medicine, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway.
76. SANE POWIC, University Department of Psychiatry, Warneford Hospital, Oxford, UK.
77. Departments of Neurosciences and Radiology, University of California, San Diego, San Diego, CA,USA.
78. UCSD Center for Translational Imaging and Precision Medicine, San Diego, CA, USA.
79. NICHE-lab, Brain Center Rudolf Magnus, Department of Psychiatry, University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht, The Netherlands.
80. Centre for Cognitive Ageing and Cognitive Epidemiology, Psychology, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK.
81. Department of Behavioral Neuroscience at Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR, USA.
82. Kimel Family Translational Imaging-Genetics Research Laboratory, Campbell Family Mental Health Research Institute, Center for
Addiction and Mental Health, Toronto, Canada.
84. Department of Psychiatry & Center for Genomic Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA,USA.
85. Stanley Center for Psychiatric Research at the Broad Institute, Cambridge, MA, USA.
86. Division of Psychological and Social Medicine and Developmental Neurosciences, Faculty of Medicine, Technische Universität Dresden,
Dresden, Germany.
87. Norwegian Centre for Mental Disorder Research (NORMENT), Institute of Clinical Medicine, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway.
91. Department of Behavioral Neuroscience, Oregon Health & Science University, USA.
93. Advanced Imaging Research Center, Oregon Health & Science University, USA.
94. K.G. Jebsen Centre for Neuropsychiatric Disorders, Department of Biomedicine, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway.
95. Department of Psychiatry, SUNY Upstate Medical University, Syracuse, NY, USA.
96. Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, Radboud University Medical Center, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
97. Institute of Psychiatric Phenomics and Genomics (IPPG), Ludwig-Maximilians-University, Munich, Germany.
98. Department of Psychiatry and Mental Health, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa.
99. The Ernest J. Del Monte Institute for Neuroscience, Department of Neuroscience, University of Rochester School of Medicine and
Dentistry.
100. Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, University Hospital, Otto-von-Guericke-University, Magdeburg, Germany.
102. School of Medical Sciences, University of New South Wales, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
106. Department of Psychiatry, Academic Medical Center, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
107. Arkin Mental Health & Amsterdam Institute for Addiction Research, Academic Medical Center, University of Amsterdam.
110. Interdisciplinary Center Psychopathology and Emotion Regulation, University Medical Center Groningen, University of Groningen,
The Netherlands.
111. Section for Experimental Psychopathology and Neuroimaging, Department of General Psychiatry, Heidelberg University, Heidelberg,
Germany.
115. Department of Psychiatry, University Medical Center Groningen, University of Groningen, The Netherlands.
119. Imaging Genetics Center, Mark and Mary Stevens Neuroimaging and Informatics Institute, Keck School of Medicine of USC, Marina
del Rey, CA 90292 USA.
120. Department of Psychiatry, University of Iowa College of Medicine, Iowa City, Iowa, USA.
122. University of Groningen, University Medical Center Groningen, Department of Psychiatry, Groningen, The Netherlands.
123. Amsterdam Institute for Addiction Research, Academic Medical Center, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
126. Department of Biological and Medical Psychology, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway.
127. De Bascule, Academic Center for Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
128. AMC, Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
129. Department of Psychiatry, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, OR, USA.
131. Departments of Cognitive Science, Psychiatry, Radiology, University of California, San Diego, CA, USA.
132. Center for Human Development, University of California, San Diego, CA, USA.
133. Norwegian Centre for Mental Disorders Research (NORMENT), K.G. Jebsen Centre for Psychosis Research, Division of Mental Health
and Addiction, Oslo University Hospital, Oslo, Norway.
135. Department of Psychiatry, University of Dublin, Trinity College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland.
136. The Child Study Center at NYU Langone Medical Center, New York, USA.
139. Clinical NeuroImaging Research Core, National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, National Institutes of Health, Baltimore,
MD, USA.
142. Child Neuropsychology Section, Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, University Hospital Aachen, Aachen, Germany.
143. Department of Psychiatry, Washington University School of Medicine, St Louis, MO, USA.
144. Department of Psychiatry, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Seoul, Republic of Korea.
145. Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, Seoul National University College of Natural Sciences, Seoul, Republic of Korea.
146. Institute of Neuroscience and Physiology, Sahlgrenska Academy at Gothenburg University, Gothenburg, Sweden.
147. Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Psychology, Hospital Clínic, Barcelona, Spain.
150. CIBERSAM.
151. School of Psychiatry, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
154. Division of Molecular Psychiatry, Center of Mental Health, University of Würzburg, Würzburg, Germany.
155. Laboratory of Psychiatric Neurobiology, Institute of Molecular Medicine, I.M. Sechenov First Moscow State Medical University,
Moscow, Russia.
156. Department of Translational Neuroscience, School for Mental Health and Neuroscience (MHeNS), Maastricht University, Maastricht,
The Netherlands.
157. Beijing Key Laboratory of Applied Experimental Psychology, National Demonstration Center for Experimental Psychology Education
(Beijing Normal University), Faculty of Psychology, Beijing Normal University, Beijing, China.
159. SU/UCT MRC Unit on Risk and Resilience in Mental Disorders, Department of Psychiatry, Stellenbosch University, South Africa.
160. Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences, University of California, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
161. Institute of Psychology Health and Society, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK.
163. Departments of Psychiatry and Pediatrics, University of Calgary, Calgary AB, Canada.
164. Child and Adolescent Imaging Research Program, Alberta Children's Hospital, Calgary AB, Canada.
165. Mathison Centre for Mental Health Research & Education, Hotchkiss Brain Institute, University of Calgary, Calgary AB, Canada.
166. Strategic Clinical Network for Addictions and Mental Health, Alberta Health Services, Calgary AB, Canada.
168. Institut des Maladies Neurodégénératives, UMR 5293. Groupe d’Imagerie Neurofonctionnelle, CEA - CNRS - Université de Bordeaux,
Bordeaux, France.
169. Developmental Imaging, Murdoch Childrens Research Institute, Royal Children׳s Hospital, Melbourne, Australia.
170. Department of Research and Education, Oslo University Hospital, Oslo, Norway.
172. Department of Psychiatry and Psychology, Hospital Clinic, University of Barcelona, IDIBAPS, CIBERSAM, Barcelona, Spain.
174. Black Dog Institute, Prince of Wales Hospital, Randwick, NSW, Australia.
176. Institut des Maladies Neurodégénératives, UMR 5293. Groupe d’Imagerie Neurofonctionnelle, CEA - CNRS - Université de Bordeaux.
177. Department of Neuroscience, Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada.
180. Neuropsychopharmacology Unit, Division of Brian Sciences, Imperial College London, London, UK.
183. Emma Children's Hospital Amsterdam Medical Center, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
185. Clinical Neuropsychology section, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
187. Department of Psychiatry, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, California, USA.
188. Child and Adolescent Mental Health Center, Capital Region, Denmark.
189. Biomedical Research Institute Sant Pau, Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau, Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red de Salut
Mental (CIBERSAM), Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain.
190. Centre for Psychiatric Research and Education, Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.
191. Department of Psychosis Studies, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology, and Neuroscience, King's College London, UK.
192. Department of Psychiatry and Legal Medicine, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain.
193. Department of Psychiatry, Hospital Universitari Vall d’Hebron, CIBERSAM, Barcelona, Spain.
194. Department of Psychiatry, Psychosomatic Medicine and Psychotherapy, University Hospital Frankfurt, Frankfurt, Germany.
197. Centre for Youth Mental Health, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia.
198. Translational Brain Research, Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, University Hospital Aachen, Aachen, Germany.
199. Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, University Hospital Aachen, Aachen, Germany.
200. Neurobehavioral Clinical Research Section, National Human Genome Research Institute, Bethesda, USA.
204. Department of Psychiatry, University of California, San Diego, 9500 Gilman Dr., La Jolla, CA, USA.
205. Veterans Affairs San Diego Health Care System, La Jolla, CA, USA.
206. Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Department of Neurology, Leipzig, Germany.
207. Leiden University, Institute of Psychology, Cognitive Psychology Unit & Leiden Institute for Brain and Cognition, Leiden, The
Netherlands.
208. School of Psychology and Illawarra Health and Medical Research Institute, University of Wollongong, Wollongong, Australia.
209. Minneapolis VA Health Care System & University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA.
210. SU/UCT MRC Unit on Risk and Resilience in Mental Disorders, Department of Psychiatry and Mental Health, University of Cape
Town, South Africa.
211. Clinical Neuroscience and Development Laboratory, Olin Neuropsychiatry Research Center, Hartford CT, USA.
212. Child & Adolescent Research, Hartford Hospital/The Institute of Living, Hartford CT, USA.
213. Department of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine, Hartford CT, USA.
214. National laboratory of Pattern Recognition, Institute of Automation, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China.
215. Department of Pediatrics, Division of Behavioral Medicine and Clinical Psychology, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center,
Cincinnati, OH, USA.
216. Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM, USA.
218. Department of Psychology and Neuroscience Institute, Georgia State University, Atlanta GA 30302.
219. Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, University of California, Irvine, Irvine, USA.
220. K.G. Jebsen Centre for Psychosis Research / Norwegian Centre for Mental Disorder Research (NORMENT), Institute of Clinical
Medicine, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway.
222. Academic Child Psychiatry Unit, Royal Children’s Hospital, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
223. Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin, corporate member of Freie Universität Berlin, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, and Berlin
Institute of Health, Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Campus Mitte, Berlin, Germany.
224. Fundació IMIM, Barcelona, Spain.
228. DZHK (German Centre for Cardiovascular Research), partner site Greifswald, Germany.
229. German Centre for Diabetes Research (DZD), Site Greifswald, Germany.
231. Brain Research Imaging Centre, Centre for Clinical Brain Sciences and Dementia Research Institute at the University of Edinburgh,
Edinburgh, UK.
232. Scottish Imaging Network, A Platform for Scientific Excellence (SINAPSE) Collaboration, Edinburgh, UK.
233. Centre for Clinical Brain Sciences, Centre for Cognitive Ageing and Cognitive Epidemiology, and UK Dementia Research Institute at
The University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK.
234. NORMENT, KG Jebsen Centre for Psychosis Research, Division of Mental Health and Addiction, Oslo University Hospital & Institute
of Clinical Medicine, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway.
236. Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Erasmus University Medical Centre, Rotterdam, Netherlands.
238. Monash Institute of Cognitive and Clinical Neurosciences and School of Psychological Sciences, Monash University, Melbourne,
Australia.
240. Yeongeon Student Support Center, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Seoul, Republic of Korea.
241. Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia.
244. Department of Human Genetics, Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, Radboud University Medical Center, Nijmegen,
The Netherlands.
245. Department of Psychiatry, Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, Radboud University Medical Center, Nijmegen, The
Netherlands.
246. Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behavior, Radboud University, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
Lars Farde (1), Lena Flyckt (1), Göran Engberg (2), Sophie Erhardt (2), Helena Fatouros-Bergman (1), Simon Cervenka (1), Lilly Schwieler
(2), Fredrik Piehl (3), Ingrid Agartz (1, 4, 5), Karin Collste (1), Pauliina Victorsson (1), Anna Malmqvist (2), Mikael Hedberg (2), Funda
Orhan (2)
1. Centre for Psychiatry Research, Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Karolinska Institutet, & Stockholm County Council, Stockholm,
Sweden
4. NORMENT, KG Jebsen Centre for Psychosis Research, Division of Mental Health and Addiction, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway
Datasets. The primary datasets used in this study for large-scale meta-analysis were from members of
the Lateralization Working Group within the ENIGMA Consortium (1). There were 99 independent
samples, including 17,141 healthy participants from diverse ethnic backgrounds. Samples were drawn
from the general population or were healthy controls from clinical studies. While we made use of
control data from case-control cohorts of psychiatric diseases, no data from the affected cases in these
datasets were used in the present study. For more details on each sample, see Dataset S1. All local
institutional review boards permitted the use of extracted measures of the completely anonymized
data.
Handedness was known for a subset of the participants. The method of assessment varied across
samples (see Further Information about Each Dataset below). An ambidextrous category was not
Two additional datasets were used to estimate heritability of asymmetry measures, i.e. the GOBS
dataset and the HCP dataset. GOBS is a family study comprising 1,443 individuals with MRI data
(836 females), aged between 18 and 85 years at the time of scanning (2). All GOBS subjects are
Mexican Americans and belong to pedigrees of varying sizes (the largest pedigree has 143 members).
The HCP is a large-scale project comprising 1,113 individuals with MRI data (606 females, age range
22-37 years at the time of scanning) of varying ethnicities (http://humanconnectome.org/). The HCP
contains 143 monozygotic twin pairs and 85 dizygotic twin pairs, as well as unrelated individuals.
Image Acquisition and Processing. Structural T1-weighted MRI scans were acquired and analyzed
locally. Images were acquired at different field strengths (1.5 T and 3 T). All images were analyzed
using the automated and validated pipeline “recon-all” implemented in FreeSurfer (version 5.3 for 91
of 99 samples). Briefly, the processing pipeline consists of 34 stages described in the help document of
“recon-all”, the main stages of which include normalization of brain signal intensity, skull-stripping,
white matter and gray matter segmentation, and delineation of the gray-white interface (inner surface)
and the pial surface (outer surface). Next, the surface is divided into separate cortical regions using an
automated labeling approach, where not only location information based on the probabilistic surface-
based atlas, but also local curvature and contextual information (e.g., sulcal and gyral geometry) of
subject-specific surface are taken into consideration. Finally, surface area and mean cortical thickness
was extracted for each of the 68 regions (34 per hemisphere) in the parcellation scheme (i.e., Desikan-
Killiany atlas) (3), as well as each hemisphere. Calculations were made in each subject’s native space.
In the present study, we chose this parcellation approach mainly because it is well-established in
the surface space, and has been widely used in brain structure studies. For example, this pipeline has
also been shown to have an overall high level of validity when comparing with manual labeling
regions, and high test-retest reliability (3). Furthermore, no differences were found in the labeling
accuracy between the two hemispheres (3). In addition, as this surface-based parcellation is integrated
in the automated reconstruction pipeline in FreeSurfer, it is feasible to apply for large collaborative
projects, and this also has the advantage of providing a comparable normative resource for future
studies (e.g., altered asymmetry in disorders). For more details on the image processing, please refer to
(3).
For each dataset, segmentations of 68 (34 per hemisphere) cortical regions were statistically
evaluated and in some cases visually inspected for outliers. Besides regional measures of cortical
thickness and surface area, two hemisphere-level measures (average cortical thickness and total
surface area), as well as the intracranial volume (ICV) were obtained for each participant. Quality
control and data analysis were performed following standardized ENIGMA protocols (see
(2016), we performed several checks to assess potential errors in the left-right orientation of the data.
Further details for the datasets (Further Information about Each Dataset) and orientation checking
Within-dataset Analyses. For each dataset, descriptive and statistical analyses of the asymmetries in
both cortical thickness and surface area were performed at each participating site using a single script
in the R language, based on unified table-formatted data. For each global hemispheric or regional
measure, an asymmetry index (AI) was defined as (L-R)/((L+R)/2), where L and R are the
corresponding thickness or area measures on the left and right hemisphere, respectively. Thus, positive
and negative AI values indicate leftward and rightward asymmetry, respectively. In addition, it is
important to note that in the definition of the AI, the difference (i.e., L-R) was normalized with the
bilateral area or thickness as denominator (i.e., L+R), such that the measure does not necessarily scale
with the overall magnitude of L and R. To exclude possible outliers in measures of cortical thickness,
surface area, or AIs, we followed Guadalupe et al. (2016) and used an adaptive threshold (SDthre)
depending on each dataset’s sample size: N < 150, SDthr = 2.5; 150 ≤ N ≤ 1000, SDthr = 3; N > 1000,
SDthr = 3.5. The adaptive threshold method was applied because outliers at similar levels can have
different influences in datasets with different sample sizes. For example, while outliers at 3SD might
have strong influence in small samples, the influence of data points at 3SD in much larger datasets
would be very limited. Using a single threshold suitable for small samples could exclude too many
subjects for datasets with large sample sizes, which is not necessary, but instead reduces the statistical
power. The median number of individuals that was excluded in each dataset are given in SI Data sheet
S1. The number varied within datasets depending on the specific regional measure.
Statistical tests were run for each hemisphere-level or regional measure separately. Paired t-tests
were used to assess inter-hemispheric differences. Cohen’s d was calculated based on each paired t-
test result to estimate the effect size of population-level asymmetry. All differences between sexes (-
1=females, 1=males) were assessed with linear regression models adjusted for age, age2, and ICV.
Cohen’s d was calculated to estimate the effect size for each comparison. Furthermore, we examined
the age effects on the AIs in cortical thickness and surface area, adjusting for sex and ICV. Similarly,
we examined associations between ICV and the AIs in cortical thickness and surface area, adjusting
for age, age2, and sex. In addition, if handedness information was available, AI differences between
handedness groups (-1=left; 1=right) were assessed with linear regression models adjusted for all the
other covariates. For each analysis above, additional covariates of scanners were included when more
We additionally used the primary data of the BIG dataset (SI Data sheet S1) to compare models
with and without including the age2 term, and found the identical sets of significant effects for the
other factors, that is age, sex, ICV all showed precisely the same patterns of significant effects across
cortical regions. This showed that the models were not confounded by collinearity between age and
age2.
Meta-analyses. All regression models and effect size estimates were fitted at each participating site
separately. We then combined the output statistics from each dataset using inverse variance-weighted
random-effect meta-analyses (4) with the R package metafor, version 1.9-9. This method tests one
overall effect, while weighting each dataset’s contribution by the inverse of its corresponding
sampling variance. Thus, unlike fixed-effect meta-analysis, this method takes into account variability
across different studies. In addition, test statistics in the meta-analyses were computed based on a
obtained using a random-effect meta-analysis model for each region and each cortical measure
(cortical thickness and surface area). Note that including results based on too few participants may
reduce reliability, and therefore we only included datasets with a sample size larger than 15. In the
meta-analysis, heterogeneity of each effect was assessed via the I2 value, which describes the
percentage of total variation across studies that is due to heterogeneity rather than chance. I2 values of
25%, 50%, and 75% indicate a low, moderate, and high heterogeneity, respectively.
Similarly, Cohen’s d estimates of sex and handedness effects on asymmetry were obtained by
meta-analysis for each cortical region. Again we only included samples with at least 15 participants
per group. In addition, we confirmed that variances in the AIs of each region were similar between
males and females, and between right- and left-handers, using two individual datasets (BIG and
BIL&GIN; we applied the F-test comparing the standard deviations between sex and handedness
groups, and found no significant differences for any asymmetry measures, BIG: F[df1, df2] =
0.92~1.14, ps > 0.10, df1 = 1193~1352, df2 = 729~971; BIL&GIN: F[df1, df2] = 0.83~1.23, ps > 0.10,
df1 = 226~231, df2 = 207~220); and similarly no handedness differences were found (BIG: F[df1, df2]
= 0.87~1.17, ps > 0.10, df1 = 1657~1992, df2 = 91~102; BILGIL: F[df1, df2] = 0.73~1.20, ps > 0.10,
continuous variables, so that effect sizes were expressed as partial-correlation r. For meta-analyses of
age effects, we only included samples with a minimum 5-year range in the initial analysis, and in a
subsequent analysis we further restricted to samples with age ranges larger than 20 years, to better
Bonferroni correction for multiple comparisons within each separate meta-analysis (i.e. correction
separately for analysis of 34 regional surface area asymmetries and 34 regional thickness asymmetries,
p = 0.05/34 = 0.00147). No correction was done for global hemispheric measures of asymmetry.
potential moderating effects on meta-analysis effect sizes. We tested whether moderating factors,
including median age, median ICV, sex ratio, handedness ratio, and MRI scanner field strength (3T, N
= 63 datasets versus 1.5T, N = 28 datasets), influenced the effect size estimates across datasets in the
meta-analyses. Each moderator variable was separately included as a fixed effect predictor in the
meta-regression model. All statistical analyses were conducted using the R software package metafor,
and Bonferroni correction was applied for multiple comparisons (p < 0.00147; see above).
thickness and surface area, firstly using the GOBS dataset (N = 1,443; see ‘Datasets’ above). For more
details about this cohort, see McKay et al. (2014). Specifically, we estimated the narrow-sense
heritability (i.e., the proportion of overall variance explained by additive genetic effects) of each AI
using variance-components analysis (5). Briefly, each AI was entered as a dependent variable into a
linear mixed-effects model, which included fixed effects of age, sex, and ICV, and a random effect of
genetic similarity, whose covariance structure was determined by the pedigrees. We refer to these as
univariate polygenic models. Second, we estimated the genetic correlations between left and right
thickness/area measures by extending the univariate polygenic models to incorporate two traits at
once; these bivariate polygenic models simultaneously estimate the heritability of left and right paired
measures, along with their genetic correlation (which indicates the extent to which their variation is
Finally, we performed similar heritability analyses in the HCP cohort (N = 1,113; see ‘Datasets’
above) to replicate findings observed with the GOBS dataset. HCP is a large-scale project which
includes monozygotic (MZ) and dizygotic (DZ) twin pairs, as well as unrelated individuals. Precisely
the same analyses were conducted in this second cohort, except for the covariance structure calculation
across individuals. Specifically, in the twin study, MZ twins are coded as 1 as they share 100% of their
DNA sequence, DZ twins and siblings are coded as 0.5 as they share on average 50%, and unrelated
observed moderate to substantial heterogeneity in the asymmetry distributions across datasets (I2
To further address the heterogeneity across the samples included in the meta-analyses, we
investigated several moderating variables, including sex ratio, median age, handedness ratio, and
median ICV. Moderator analyses revealed an influence of the median age of samples on the global
asymmetry with increasing age. No other potential moderators showed significant effects on global
cortical thickness or surface area asymmetry (p > 0.10). Moderator analyses for each specific region
suggested an influence of the median age of samples on the asymmetry of the surface area of the
paracentral gyrus (Z = -4.35, p = 1.38e-5), and an influence of median ICV on the asymmetry of the
surface area in the insula (Z = -3.18, p = 0.0014). Given that both the paracentral gyrus and insula
showed significant rightward asymmetry in surface area, these findings indicate a decreasing
rightward asymmetry with increasing age and with ICV, respectively. In addition, we found a
significant effect of scanner field strength on the surface area asymmetry in the insula (Z = 4.12, p =
3.82e-5). However, this could be largely reduced by including the other moderating variables (i.e., sex
ratio, median age, handedness ratio, and median ICV) in the analysis (Z = 2.35, p = 0.019). Similarly,
we additionally ran separate meta-analyses for studies with 1.5T and 3T scanners in order to gauge
whether magnet field strength was an important factor affecting asymmetry measures, but we found
similar results at 1.5T and 3T. For example, the population-level asymmetries in cortical thickness
across the 34 regions from the two analyses showed high correlations (r = 0.88, p = 7.53e-12).
Relationship between asymmetry of cortical thickness and surface area. Previous studies have
suggested that thickness and surface area are evolutionarily, genetically, and developmentally distinct
(6, 7). We confirmed a lack of correlation across regions between the asymmetries of thickness and
surface areas, which further supports their independent natures. Specifically, effect sizes of cortical
thickness and surface area were found to be independent, as illustrated by the absence of a significant
correlation between thickness and surface area asymmetries across all cortical regions (r = -0.14, p =
0.416).
Moreover, with data on participants’ sex, age, handedness, and ICV, we found no overall
correlations between the effects of these factors across regions, on either cortical thickness or surface
area. Specifically, we did not observe a significant correlation across regions of the sex effects on the
asymmetries of cortical thickness and surface area (r = 0.14, p = 0.434). Similarly, no significant
correlation was found between the age effects across regions on cortical thickness asymmetry and
surface area asymmetry (ps > 0.05 for both age-range thresholds of 5 and 20 years). Similar findings
were found between the handedness effects across regions for cortical thickness asymmetry and
surface area asymmetry (r = -0.15, p = 0.403), and between the effects of ICV (r = -0.14, p = 0.417).
These findings further elaborated the largely independent nature of regional area versus thickness
variability.
References
1. Thompson PM, et al. (2014) The ENIGMA Consortium: large-scale collaborative analyses of
neuroimaging and genetic data. Brain Imaging Behav 8(2):153-182.
2. McKay DR, et al. (2014) Influence of age, sex and genetic factors on the human brain. Brain
Imaging Behav 8(2):143-152.
3. Desikan RS, et al. (2006) An automated labeling system for subdividing the human cerebral
cortex on MRI scans into gyral based regions of interest. Neuroimage 31(3):968-980.
4. Borenstein M, Hedges LV, Higgins JP, & Rothstein HR (2010) A basic introduction to fixed-
effect and random-effects models for meta-analysis. Research synthesis methods 1(2):97-
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5. Almasy L & Blangero J (1998) Multipoint quantitative-trait linkage analysis in general
pedigrees. Am J Hum Genet 62(5):1198-1211.
6. Panizzon MS, et al. (2009) Distinct genetic influences on cortical surface area and cortical
thickness. Cereb Cortex 19(11):2728-2735.
7. Raznahan A, et al. (2011) How Does Your Cortex Grow? Journal of Neuroscience 31(19):7174-
7177.
8. Luders E, et al. (2006) Hemispheric asymmetries in cortical thickness. Cereb Cortex
16(8):1232-1238.
9. Zhou D, Lebel C, Evans A, & Beaulieu C (2013) Cortical thickness asymmetry from childhood
to older adulthood. Neuroimage 83:66-74.
10. Plessen KJ, Hugdahl K, Bansal R, Hao X, & Peterson BS (2014) Sex, age, and cognitive
correlates of asymmetries in thickness of the cortical mantle across the life span. J Neurosci
34(18):6294-6302.
11. Koelkebeck K, et al. (2014) The contribution of cortical thickness and surface area to gray
matter asymmetries in the healthy human brain. Hum Brain Mapp 35(12):6011-6022.
12. Chiarello C, Vazquez D, Felton A, & McDowell A (2016) Structural asymmetry of the human
cerebral cortex: Regional and between-subject variability of surface area, cortical thickness,
and local gyrification. Neuropsychologia 93(Pt B):365-379.
13. Maingault S, Tzourio-Mazoyer N, Mazoyer B, & Crivello F (2016) Regional correlations
between cortical thickness and surface area asymmetries: A surface-based morphometry
study of 250 adults. Neuropsychologia 93:350-364.
SI Figures
SI Fig. S1. Mixed results of the structural asymmetry in cortical thickness in previous studies.
Details for each study please refer to References above (8-13).
SI Datasets
SI Data sheet S1. Brief summary of each dataset used in the meta-analysis.
mri_convert: (https://surfer.nmr.mgh.harvard.edu/pub/docs/html/mri_convert.help.xml.html)
MRIConvert: (http://lcni.uoregon.edu/downloads/mriconvert)
dcm2nii: (http://www.cabiatl.com/mricro/mricron/dcm2nii.html)
spm_dicom_convert: http://www.fil.ion.ucl.ac.uk/spm/
Given no problem was found, such orientation issue would unlikely be a big contribution to the present
results.
Finally, we found that, although thickness asymmetry showed large heterogeneity across samples,
the heterogeneity of surface area asymmetry is much smaller. Except a few samples, size effect and
direction of surface area asymmetries are consistent between sample and with the expected literature
(i.e. large rightward asymmetry). This consistent asymmetry in surface area suggests that the “opposite”
asymmetry issue in cortical thickness would unlikely be caused by incorrect orientation issues. In
addition, we further identified several samples showing “opposite” asymmetry in both hemispheric
cortical thickness and surface area compared with the population-level direction. Seven groups were
obtained, including MuensterCohort (N = 739), SanPaulo3 (N = 85), NESDA (N = 65), VanHolst (N =
24), 01_Cheng_3T (N = 93), UMCG (N = 23) and Sjoerds (N = 20). After further checking with the
contributors, no problem was found. These results further confirmed correct orientation and the present
results.
Further Information about Each Dataset
We listed the datasets used in the present study, along with a brief introduction for each dataset, and
information for handedness assessment, imaging scanning and data analysis. Note that one dataset
could come from several projects. Thus, we included the further information for the all projects.
DStein
We could use "MacMasterMDD" as the merged project heading. So that the samples could be
MacMasterMDD_IWK, MacMasterMDD_Remady, MacMasterMDD_MDDEX, and
MacMasterMDD_BMI.
Self-report.
MDDEX (24612):
Self-Report.
3. Image Scanning and Data analysis
Remady (24656):
Self-Report.
BMI (24796):
N/A
Project Name: The Genetics and Brain Imaging of Pediatric OCD (Clínic_Barcelona)
Handedness was assessed with a Spanish version of The Edinburgh Inventory (Oldfield, 1971).
Oldfield RC. The assessment and analysis of handedness: The Edinburgh Inventory.
Neuropsychologia 1971; 9:97-113.
Self report when in doubt confirmation with the Edinburgh Handedness Inventory
3. Image Scanning and Data analysis
MRI data were acquired with a 3 Tesla Philips Interna scanner. The parameters used were matrix
256x256, 182 slices and, voxel size 1 x 1 x 1.2 mm. Images were processed with FreeSurfer version
5.3.
3T_Child_Adolescent_Lateralization
3 Tesla - 14 Subjects (Up to 18 years old)
Principal Investigators:
3T Pediatric - (Philips Achieva): matrix 256X256, 165 slices, voxel size: 1.0 X 1.0 X 1.0 mm;
Ganesan Venkatasubramanian
Janardhanan C Narayanaswamy
TOP3T_GE750
Project Name: TOP3T GE750 and STROKEMRI2 (TOP3T_2)
The TOP study was supported by the Research Council of Norway (#160181, 190311, 223273,
213837, 249711), the South-East Norway Health Authority (2014114, 2014097, 2017- 112), and the
Kristian Gerhard Jebsen Stiftelsen (SKGJ-MED-008) and the European Community's Seventh
Framework Programme (FP7/2007–2013), grant agreement no. 602450 (IMAGEMEND).
Self-reported.
The TOP study was supported by the Research Council of Norway (#160181, 190311, 223273,
213837, 249711), the South-East Norway Health Authority (2014114, 2014097, 2017- 112), and the
Kristian Gerhard Jebsen Stiftelsen (SKGJ-MED-008) and the European Community's Seventh
Framework Programme (FP7/2007–2013), grant agreement no. 602450 (IMAGEMEND).
This work was supported by the Brain and Behavior Research Foundation grant (formerly NARSAD)
to T.T.Y. and by a US National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) grant to T.T.Y. (R01MH085734).
Colm G. Connolly, PhD 1; Tiffany C. Ho, PhD 1,2 Alan N. Simmons, PhD 6,7; Tony T. Yang, MD,
PhD 1
1 Department of Psychiatry, Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, and Weill Institute for
Neurosciences, University of California, San Francisco, 401 Parnassus Avenue, San Francisco, CA,
USA.
6 Department of Psychiatry, University of California, San Diego, 9500 Gilman Dr., La Jolla, CA,
USA.
7 Veterans Affairs San Diego Health Care System, La Jolla, CA, USA.
OXUK
Project Name: Oxford Early Onset Psychosis study (OXEOP)
MRC funded grant number: G0500092 - Anatomical connectivity in early onset schizophrenia
Ethics : The study was undertaken in accordance with the guidance of the Oxford Psychiatric Research
Ethics Committee and written consent was obtained from all participants (and their parents.
The participants underwent the same imaging protocol with a whole-brain T1-weighted and diffusion-
weighted scanning using a 1.5T Sonata MR imager (Siemens, Erlangen, Germany) with a standard
quadrature head coil and maximum 40mT.m 1 gradient capability.
The 3D T1-weighted FLASH sequence was performed with the following parameters: coronal
orientation, matrix 256 256, 208 slices, 1 1 mm2 in-plane resolution, slice thickness 1 mm,
TE/TR=5.6/12ms, flip angle =19 .
...
Douaud, G., Smith, S., Jenkinson, M., Behrens, T., Johansen-Berg, H., Vickers, J., . . . James, A.
(2007). Anatomically related grey and white matter abnormalities in adolescent-onset schizophrenia.
Brain, 130(Pt 9), 2375-2386. doi:awm184 [pii]10.1093/brain/awm184
Oldfield, R. C. (1971). The assessment and analysis of handedness: the Edinburgh inventory.
Neuropsychologia, 9(1), 97-113.
GloriaBPSydney
Project Name: The ‘Bipolar Kids and Sibs’ Study (Bipolar Kids and Sibs)
Self-report
Images were acquired with a 3-T Philips Achieva scanner at Neuroscience Research Australia in
Sydney. Each scan started with 1 min of standard scout images to adjust head positioning, followed by
a reference scan to resolve sensitivity variations. A total of 180 T1-weighted anatomic three
dimensional turbo field-echo sagittal images (voxel size=1×1×1mm3 resolution; field of view=256 ×
256 × 180mm3; repetition time/echo time= 5.5/2.5 ms; flip angle = 8°) were acquired to allow
subsequent spatial normalization. FreeSurfer version 5.3 was used.
Orr
Project Name: Cannabis (Addiction_Orr)
Self Report
Narelle K. Hansell
Greig I. de Zubicaray
Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane,
Australia
Katie L. McMahon
Margaret J. Wright
Self-report and self-report confirmed by Annett’s questionnaire for a part of the sample
The project was supported by National Natural Science Foundation of China (31230031, 31221003,
31471067, 31470055)
FreeSurfer processing: regular automatic reconstruction procedure version 5.3 ran in a Mac OS
platform, followed by the regular ENIGMA quality control protocol.
Just a correction on São Paulo 1: the skullstrip step from FreeSurfer 5.3 was skipped, once another
skullstrip protocol had already been performed before the FreeSurfer's automatic reconstruction.
Ozlem
Project Name: Neuro-ADAPT
Ozlem Korucuoglu
The study was approved by the Ethics Committee of the Faculty of Social and Behavioral Sciences of
the University of Amsterdam.
OK received support for the Neuro-ADAPT study from VICI grant no. 453.08.01 from the
Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) awarded to Reinout W Wiers.
2. Handedness Assessment Information
The Brain Imaging Genetics (BIG) database was established in Nijmegen in 2007. This resource is
now part of Cognomics, a joint initiative by researchers of the Donders Centre for Cognitive
Neuroimaging, the Human Genetics and Cognitive Neuroscience departments of the Radboud
University Medical Center, and the Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics. The Cognomics
Initiative is supported by the participating departments and centres and by external grants, i.e. the
Biobanking and Biomolecular Resources Research Infrastructure (Netherlands) (BBMRI-NL), the
Hersenstichting Nederland, and the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO). The
research on BIG also receives funding from the European Community‘s Seventh Framework
Programme (FP7/2007–2013) under grant agreements #602450 (IMAGEMEND) and #602805
(Aggressotype) and from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Consortium grant U54 EB020403,
supported by a cross-NIH alliance that funds Big Data to Knowledge Centers of Excellence. We
would also like to thank Hans van Bokhoven for his contributions to the Cognomics initiative and to
all persons who kindly participated in this research. In addition, AF Marquand gratefully
acknowledges support from the Language in Interaction project, funded by the NWO under the
Gravitation Programme (grant 024.001.006).
Handedness assessment was based on self-report data.
MRI data in BIG were acquired with either a 1.5 Tesla Siemens Sonata or Avanto scanner or a 3 Tesla
Siemens Trio or TimTrio scanner (Erlangen, Germany). Given that images were acquired during
several smaller scale studies, the parameters used were slight variations of a standard T1-weighted
three-dimensional magnetization prepared rapid gradient echo sequence (MPRAGE; 1.0×1.0×1.0 mm
voxel size). FreeSurfer version 5.3 was used.
PIs
Janna Cousijn
Department of Developmental Psychology, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, the Netherlands
Anna E. Goudriaan
Department of Psychiatry, Academic Medical Center, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The
Netherlands
The MR images at CAMH were acquired using an 8-channel head coil on a 1.5-T system (EchoSpeed;
General Electric Medical Systems). Axial inversion recovery–prepared spoiled gradient recall (SPGR)
images were acquired using a 1.5-mm-thick slice acquisition with the following image parameters:
echo time (TE), 5.3 milliseconds; repetition time (TR), 12.3 milliseconds; time to inversion, 300.0
milliseconds; and flip angle, 20°, final voxel size 0.8x0.8x1.5mm. FreeSurfer version 5.3 was used.
ClarissaBr
Project Name: The Brazilian Institute of Neuroscience and Neurotechnology (BRAINN)
Data was processed with FreeSurfer (5.3.0) according to protocols of the ENIGMA Consortium.
Data was processed with FreeSurfer (5.3.0) according to protocols of the ENIGMA Consortium.
NUIG
Dataset Name: NUIG
Self-reported.
Project Name: The Galway Bipolar Study: An investigation into neurobiological markers in patients
with euthymic bipolar disorder
Self-reported.
MRI data in the Galway Bipolar Study were acquired on a 1.5T Tesla Siemens Magnetom Symphony,
software platform Numaris 2004A, running VA30A software (Erlangen, Germany). The parameters
used were T1-weighted three-dimensional magnetization prepared rapid gradient echo sequence
(MPRAGE; 0.45 x 0.45 x 0.9 mm voxel size). FreeSurfer version 5.3 was used.
Genevieve McPhilemy, Theophilus Akudjedu, Giulia Tronchin, Colm McDonald, Dara M. Cannon
Centre for Neuroimaging & Cognitive Genomics (NICOG), Clinical Neuroimaging Laboratory,
NCBES Galway Neuroscience Centre, College of Medicine Nursing and Health Sciences, National
University of Ireland Galway, H91 TK33 Galway, Ireland.
01_Cheng_1.5T
Project Name: Yuqi Cheng 1.5T (OCD_Cheng_1.5T)
1. Brief introduction, funding with ethical standards
The database was established in Kunming in 2007. This resource was approved by the ethics
committee of the First Affiliated Hospital of Kunming Medical College. This study was supported the
Funding of Yunnan Provincial Health Science and Technology Plan (2010NS016, 2011WS008), the
united founding of Yunnan Administration of Science & Technology and Kunming Medical
College(2011FB167),
Handedness was assessed with Annett’s Hand Preference Questionnaire (Annett, 1970).
3. Image Scanning and Data analysis
Imaging data were acquired using two MRI scanners (at the Clinics Hospital of the University of Sa ̃ o
Paulo 1.5 T GE Signa scanner, General Electric, Milwaukee Wisconsin, USA). In total 72 people with
psychosis and 57 controls were investigated using scanner 1 and 50 people with psycho- sis and 37
controls using scanner 2. Exactly the same acquisition protocols were used (a T1-SPGR sequence
providing 124 contigu- ous slices, voxel size 0.8660.8661.5 mm, echo time 5.2 ms, resolution time
21.7 ms, flip angle 20, field of vision 22, matrix 2566192).
FreeSurfer processing: regular automatic reconstruction version 5.3 procedure ran in a Mac OS
platform, followed by white matter mask correction for regions with poor cortical delineation (mainly
in the temporal lobe; majority of subjects) and then by the regular ENIGMA quality control protocol.
1.5T_Adults_Lateralization
1.5 Tesla - 20 Subjects (>18 years old - adults)
Principal Investigators:
The 3 Tesla structural MRI data from 171 healthy subjects were obtained as part of three funded
projects Government of India grants to the Wellcome-DBT India Alliance grant to Dr.
Venkatasubramanian (500236/Z/11/Z), Prof. Reddy (SR/S0/HS/0016/2011) and Dr. Narayanaswamy
(DST INSPIRE faculty grant -IFA12-LSBM-26) of the Department of Science and Technology; the
Government of India grants to Prof. Reddy No.BT/PR13334/Med/30/259/2009) and Dr.
Narayanaswamy (BT/06/IYBA/2012) of the Department of Biotechnology.
These research studies examined patients with schizophrenia or obsessive-compulsive disorder and the
healthy controls were recruited as comparison subjects.
1.5T Adult – (Siemens Vision): matrix 256X160, 160 slices, voxel size 0.98X0.98X1 mm
3T_Adults_Lateralization
3 Tesla - 171 Healthy Subjects (>18 years old - adults)
Principal Investigators:
The 3 Tesla structural MRI data from 171 healthy subjects were obtained as part of three funded
projects Government of India grants to the Wellcome-DBT India Alliance grant to Dr.
Venkatasubramanian (500236/Z/11/Z), Prof. Reddy (SR/S0/HS/0016/2011) and Dr. Narayanaswamy
(DST INSPIRE faculty grant -IFA12-LSBM-26) of the Department of Science and Technology; the
Government of India grants to Prof. Reddy No.BT/PR13334/Med/30/259/2009) and Dr.
Narayanaswamy (BT/06/IYBA/2012) of the Department of Biotechnology.
These research studies examined patients with schizophrenia or obsessive-compulsive disorder and the
healthy controls were recruited as comparison subjects.
3T Adult - (Siemens Skyra): matrix 256X256, 192 slices, voxel size 1.0 X 1.0 X 1.0 mm;
EStein
Project Name: EStein (Addiction_EStein)
Cocaine:
Smokers:
Eliot A. Stein, Elisabeth C. Caparelli
These projects examined how structural and functional brain abnormalities were associated with
attention, working memory (R01DA015179, EDL), response inhibition, cognitive flexibility and
decision making in methamphetamine users (R01DA020726, P20DA022539, EDL). Additional
support for these projects came from the Thomas P. and Katherine K. Pike Chair in Addiction Studies
and the Endowment from the Marjorie Greene Family Trust (EDL).
Murat Yucel
1. Brief introduction, funding with ethical standards
The goal of this study was to examine the impact of long-term cannabis use on human brain structure
and function.
Authorship should include Murat Yucel, Nadia Solowij, Valentina Lorenzetti and Yann Chye
I can confirm that local IRB approval was obtained. That is, this study was approved by the local
Human Research and Ethics Board, and all participants provided written, informed consent before
participation.
This study was funded by National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) of Australia
(Project Grant 459111). MY was supported by a National Health and Medical Research Council
Fellowship (#1117188) and the David Winston Turner Endowment Fund.
EHI
Chronic Cannabis:
Nadia Solowij
1. Brief introduction, funding with ethical standards
This study recruited an exceptionally well-characterized sample of very heavy long-term cannabis
users and matched controls (as well as people with schizophrenia with and without comorbid very
heavy long-term cannabis use), with the aim to assess brain structure and function.
The study was supported by grants from the Clive and Vera Ramaciotti Foundation (NS), the
Schizophrenia Research Institute using infrastructure funding from NSW Health (NS), the University
of Wollongong (NS), the National Health and Medical Research Council Program Grant (350241
MY), Project Grant (459111 NS) and Clinical Career Development Award (509345 MY), and an
Australian Research Council Future Fellowship (FT110100752 NS).
The study was approved by the University of Wollongong and South East Sydney and Illawarra Local
Health Disctrict Human Research Ethics Committee. Participants provided written informed consent
to participate in the study.
Self-report.
In the Seoul III dataset, the whole-brain anatomy was assessed using high-resolution T1-weighted,
three-dimensional Magnetization Prepared Rapid Gradient Echo (TR = 1,670 ms; TE = 1.89 ms;
FOV = 250 mm; FA = 9°; voxel size = 1 × 0.977 × 0.977 mm) at 3-Tesla scanner (Siemens Magnetom
Trio, Erlangen, Germany). For MRI data processing, FreeSurfer version 5.3 was used.
KwonNMC_15T
Project Name: Seoul II dataset (previously named as KwonNMC_15T)
MRI data in Seoul I dataset were acquired with three-dimensional T1-weighted spoiled gradient echo
sequence on a 1.5 Tesla GE SIGNA Scanner (GE Medical System, Milwaukee, USA). Imaging
parameters were as follows: 1.5 mm sagittal slices; echo time=5.5 ms; repetition time=14.4 ms;
rotation angle=20°; field of view = 21 × 21 cm; and a matrix of 256 × 256. For MRI data processing,
FreeSurfer version 5.3 was used.
BILGIN
Project Name: The BIL&GIN database
• Reconstruction of cortical surfaces and measurement cortical thickness and surface area were
performed using the FreeSurfer 5.3.0 image analysis suite. FreeSurfer constructs models of the cortical
surface (white and pial). Each pial and white surface on each axial, sagittal and coronal section of each
participant were visually checked twice and identified segmentation errors were reported in 48 cases
(11%). A correction procedure consisting of manually adding an average of 9 control points (SD, 7) in
the misclassified white matter was applied in these 48 cases. The automatic FreeSurfer segmentation
procedure was then re-applied on these individuals, resulting in an accurate surface reconstruction
after a novel round of quality control visual check.
TOP15T
Project Name: TOP1.5T
The TOP study was supported by the Research Council of Norway (#160181, 190311, 223273,
213837, 249711), the South-East Norway Health Authority (2014114, 2014097, 2017- 112), and the
Kristian Gerhard Jebsen Stiftelsen (SKGJ-MED-008) and the European Community's Seventh
Framework Programme (FP7/2007–2013), grant agreement no. 602450 (IMAGEMEND).
Self-reported.
Self-report
Research Team: Anne Uhlmann, Henk S Temmingh, Dan J Stein, Fleur M Howells (PI)
1. Brief introduction, funding with ethical standards
The CIAM study was conducted at the University of Cape Town, Department of Psychiatry and
Mental Health, and was supported by the Department of Psychiatry and Mental Health and University
Research Committee, University of Cape Town, South Africa and the National Research Foundation
South Africa.
Scanner information: 2 scanners (Tygerberg from 2007 – 2014; UCT from 2014 onwards):
T1 MPRAGE information:
Tygerberg: Siemens Magnetom Allegra 3T; voxel size (1.0×1.0×1.0 [mm] ), slices (160), FoV read
(256mm), slice thickness (1mm), distance factor (50%), TR (2530.0 ms), Base resolution (256), scan
time: 10:49, flip angle: 9.1, Echo spacing: 8.9
UCT: Siemens Magnetom Skyra 3T; voxel size (1.0×1.0×1.0 [mm] ), slices (160), FoV read (256mm),
slice thickness (1mm), distance factor (50%), TR (2530.0 ms), Base resolution (256), scan time: 6:02,
flip angle: 7.0, Echo spacing: 9.8
Christine Lochner
SU/UCT MRC Unit on Risk and Resilience in Mental Disorders, Department of Psychiatry,
Stellenbosch University, South Africa
Dan J. Stein
SU/UCT MRC Unit on Risk and Resilience in Mental Disorders, Department of Psychiatry and
Mental Health, University of Cape Town, South Africa
Garavan
Project Name: Trinity-THC (Addiction_Garavan)
Funding source: This research was supported by USPHS grant from the National Institute on Drug
Abuse: DA01865-01, Australian Research Council Grant (RH) DP0556602 and Australian National
Health and Medical Research Council Career Development Award 519730 (RH).
2. Handedness Assessment Information
IRC:
Self-report
SCOR:
Self-report
KaSP:
Karolinska Schizophrenia Project (KaSP) is a multidisciplinary research consortium that investigates
the pathophysiology of schizophrenia. KaSP enrolls first-episode mostly drug naïve patients in
Stockholm in a programme involving CSF and blood sampling, structural and functional MR
examinations, molecular PET, cardiovascular measures and extensive clinical characterization
including cognitive function. One major objective is to examine immune-related pathways in
schizophrenia.
The study was approved by the Regional Ethics Committee in Stockholm and conformed to the tenets
of the Declaration of Helsinki. Subjects were included after providing written informed consent after
receiving a complete description of the study. Diagnosis was established based on a structured clinical
interview of the DSM-IV or a consensus diagnostic procedure. Subjects were included from Jan 2011.
The project is ongoing.
KaSP was supported by the Swedish Research Council (K2015-62X-15077-12-3), and by grants from
the Swedish Medical Research Council (SE: 2009-7053; 2013-2838; SC: 523- 2014-3467), the
Swedish Brain Foundation, Åhlén-siftelsen, Svenska Läkaresällskapet, Petrus och Augusta Hedlunds
Stiftelse, Torsten Söderbergs Stiftelse, the AstraZeneca-Karolinska Institutet Joint Research Program
in Translational Science, Söderbergs Königska Stiftelse, Professor Bror Gadelius Minne, Knut och
Alice Wallenbergs stiftelse, Stockholm County Council (ALF and PPG), Centre for Psychiatry
Research, KID-funding from the Karolinska Institutet.
HUBIN:
The HUBIN project has since 1999 investigated patients with schizophrenia spectrum disorder and
control subjects with the aim to add to the understanding of the etiology and pathogenesis of the
disorder. Patients have been recruited from psychiatric clinics in northwestern Stockholm County and
control subjects either among subjects previously participating in biological psychiatric research at the
Karolinska Institutet or drawn from a representative register of the population in Stockholm County.
All participants had given informed consent prior to inclusion in the project. The Ethical Committee of
the Karolinska Hospital, the Stockholm Regional Ethical Committee and the Swedish Data Inspection
Board approved the study. The study was supported by the Swedish Research Council (grant numbers
K2015-62X-15077-12-3), the regional agreement between Karolinska Institutet and Stockholm
County Council, the Karolinska Institutet and the Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation.
Self report.
T1-images were acquired using a 3T GE scanner and 3D IR prep fast SPGR sequence with
the following parameters: TR=7.904ms, TE=3.06ms, TI = 450ms, flip angle = 12, 146 sagittal
slices, voxel size = 0.934 x 0.934 x 1.2 mm3, matrix = 256 x 256. FreeSurfer version 5.3 was
used for data processing.
Malt
Project Name: Oslo Malt study (Elvsåshagen T, Bøen E, Malt UF)
1. Brief introduction, funding with ethical standards
The Oslo Malt study is a longitudinal study of brain structure and plasticity in healthy controls and
individuals with bipolar II disorder. The study is conducted at Oslo University Hospital, Oslo,
Norway. The study is funded by the Research Council of Norway (167153/V50, 204966/F20), the
South-Eastern Norway Regional Health Authority, Oslo University Hospital, and research grants from
Mrs. Aslaug Throne-Holst and from the Ebbe Frøland Foundation.
Handedness was based on self report in a clinical interview with one of the study psychiatrists.
Self-report
These projects studied cognitive control and reward processing in current and abstinent cocaine users.
Self-report
Supported by the Dutch Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) (grants 912-02-050, 907-00-012,
940-37-018, and 916.86.038).
5. Vriend C, de Wit SJ, Remijnse PL, van Balkom AJ, Veltman DJ, van den Heuvel OA. Switch the
itch: a naturalistic follow-up study on the neural correlates of cognitive flexibility in obsessive-
compulsive disorder. Psychiatry Res. 2013 Jul 30;213(1):31-8.
6. Remijnse PL, van den Heuvel OA, Nielen MM, Vriend C, Hendriks GJ, Hoogendijk WJ, Uylings
HB, Veltman DJ. Cognitive inflexibility in obsessive-compulsive disorder and major depression is
associated with distinct neural correlates. PLoS One. 2013 Apr 24;8(4):e59600.
7. Remijnse PL, Nielen MM, van Balkom AJ, Hendriks GJ, Hoogendijk WJ, Uylings HB, Veltman
DJ. Differential frontal-striatal and paralimbic activity during reversal learning in major depressive
disorder and obsessive-compulsive disorder. Psychol Med. 2009 Sep;39(9):1503-18.
8. Remijnse PL, Nielen MM, van Balkom AJ, Cath DC, van Oppen P, Uylings HB, Veltman DJ.
Reduced orbitofrontal-striatal activity on a reversal learning task in obsessive-compulsive disorder.
Arch Gen Psychiatry. 2006 Nov;63(11):1225-36.
Self report
Self-report
Image Acquisition: All images were obtained using the same 1.5 T Siemens MRI scanner (Magnetom
Avanto, Siemens Medical Systems, Erlangen, Germany) with a T1-weighted magnetization prepared
rapid acquisition gradient echo (MPRAGE) sequence and following parameters: axial plane, TR=1900
ms, TE=3.4 ms and Flip angle=15° and an original resolution of 1.0 x 1.0 x 1.0mm3.
Katharina Wittfeld
German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE), Rostock/ Greifswald, Germany
Henry Völzke
Institute for Community Medicine, University Medicine Greifswald, Germany; DZHK (German
Centre for Cardiovascular Research), partner site Greifswald, Germany; German Centre for Diabetes
Research (DZD), Site Greifswald, Germany
Robin Bülow
Department of Diagnostic Radiology and Neuroradiology, University Medicine Greifswald,
Greifswald, Germany
Momenan
Project Name: NIAAA (Addiction_NIAAA)
Reza Momenan
Both protocols are IRB approved. Participants enrolled in both protocols are consented.
Data collection by RM was supported by the Intramural Clinical and Biological Research (DICBR)
Program of the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA), National Institutes of
Health.
Self-report and Edinburgh Handedness Inventory were used to determine the handedness. Individuals
with positive scores of the EHI were considered Right Handed.
4. NIAAA, Contibutors
Self-report
5. Fan S, van den Heuvel OA, Cath DC, van der Werf YD, de Wit SJ, de Vries FE, Veltman DJ,
Pouwels PJ. Mild White Matter Changes in Un-medicated Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder Patients
and Their Unaffected Siblings. Front Neurosci. 2016 Jan 11;9:495.
MRI data were acquired with a 3 Tesla Philips Achieva scanner. The parameters used were matrix
matrix 228 x 228, 230 slices and, voxel size 1.1 x 1.1 x 0.6 mm³. Images were processed with
FreeSurfer version 5.3.
UMCG_sample_groenewold
Project Name: DIP GRONINGEN
Self-report
Self-report
Affiliations Lianne:
1 Orygen, The National Centre of Excellence in Youth Mental Health, Parkville, Australia
2 Centre for Youth Mental Health, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia.
3 Department of Psychiatry, Amsterdam Neuroscience, VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam,
The Netherlands
OLDERS
Project Name: Gene-Brain-Behavior (GBB) Project (GBB_OLDERS)
The SHIP study was approved by the ethics committee of the University of Greifswald. Written
informed consent was obtained from all participants.
SHIP is part of the Community Medicine Research net of the University of Greifswald, Germany,
which is funded by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research (grants no. 01ZZ9603, 01ZZ0103,
and 01ZZ0403), the Ministry of Cultural Affairs and the Social Ministry of the Federal State of
Mecklenburg-West Pomerania. MRI scans in SHIP have been supported by a joint grant from Siemens
Healthineers, Erlangen, Germany and the Federal State of Mecklenburg-West Pomerania.
Self-report
Image Acquisition: All images were obtained using the same 1.5 T Siemens MRI scanner (Magnetom
Avanto, Siemens Medical Systems, Erlangen, Germany) with a T1-weighted magnetization prepared
rapid acquisition gradient echo (MPRAGE) sequence and following parameters: axial plane, TR=1900
ms, TE=3.4 ms and Flip angle=15° and an original resolution of 1.0 x 1.0 x 1.0mm3.
Self reported.
MRI data were obtained on three 1.5 Tesla scanners and a 3 Tesla scanner owing to the multi-site
nature of this study. Siemens Magnetom Avanto and Sonata scanners (Siemens Medical Solutions,
Malvern PA, USA) with similar years of manufacture and upgrade were used in centres 2 and 3,
respectively. In centre 1, a 1.5 T Philips Gyroscan scanner (Philips Medical Systems, Best,
Netherlands) was used initially, followed by a 3 Tesla Philips Achieva Quasar Dual scanner. See (Wen
et al for details) 3D T1-weighted volumetric sequence was performed using a similar protocol for the
1.5 Tesla scanners in the three centres with in-plane resolution = 1×1 mm, slice thickness = 1.5 mm,
slice number =144, TR (Repetition time) = 1530 ms, TE (Echo time) = 3.24 ms, TI (Inversion time) =
780 ms, and flip angle = 8. The acquisition parameters for the 3 Tesla Philips scanner in centre 1 were:
TR/TE = 6.39/2.9 ms, in-plane resolution = 1×1 mm, slice thickness = 1 mm, slice number =190,
resulting isotropic voxels of 1×1×1 mm3. Two 3D T1-weighted scans were acquired for each
participant for an increased signal-to-noise ratio (SNR).
References
Sachdev PS, Lammel A, Trollor JN, Lee T, Wright MJ, Ames D, Wen W, Martin NG, Brodaty H,
Schofield PR; OATS research team. (2009). A Comprehensive Neuropsychiatric Study of Elderly
Twins:The Older Australian Twins Study.Twin Res Hum Genet 12 (6) 573-582
Perminder S Sachdev
Centre for Healthy Brain Ageing, School of Psychiatry, UNSW Australia
Wei Wen
Centre for Healthy Brain Ageing, School of Psychiatry, UNSW Australia
Henry Brodaty
Dementia Collaborative Research Centre ØC Assessment and Better Care, University of New South
Wales, Sydney, Australia
Nicola J Armstrong
David Ames
National Ageing Research Institute, Melbourne, Australia
Academic Unit for Psychiatry of Old Age, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia
NicolaMAS
Project Name: MAS
Self-reported.
References
Jiang J, Sachdev P, Lipnicki DM, Zhang H, Liu T, et al. (2013) A longitudinal study of brain atrophy
over two years in community-dwelling older individuals. NeuroImage
10.1016/j.neuroimage.2013.08.022.
Sachdev, P.S., Brodaty, H., Reppermund, S., Kochan, N.A., Trollor, J.N., Draper, B., Slavin, M.J.,
Crawford, J., Kang, K., Broe, G.A., Mather, K.A., Lux, O.; Memory and Ageing Study Team. (2010).
The Sydney Memory and Ageing Study (MAS): methodology and baseline medical and
neuropsychiatric characteristics of an elderly epidemiological non-demented cohort of Australians
aged 70-90 years. Int Psychogeriatr Dec;22(8):1248-64.
Perminder S Sachdev
Henry Brodaty
Nicola J Armstrong
Refs:
Deary, I.J., Gow, A.J., Taylor, M.D., Corley, J., Brett, C., Wilson, V., Campbell, H., Whalley, L.J.,
Visscher, P.M., Porteous, D.J. Starr, J.M.. The Lothian Birth Cohort 1936: a study to examine
influences on cognitive ageing from age 11 to age 70 and beyond. BMC Geriatr 7, 28 (2007). PMID
18053258
Wardlaw, J. M., Bastin, M. E., Valdes Hernandez, M. C., Munoz maniega, S., Royle, N. A., Morris,
Z., Claysden, J. D., Sandeman, E. M., Eadie, E., Murray, C., Starr, J. M., & Deary, I. J. (2011). Brain
ageing, cognition in youth and old age, and vascular disease in the Lothian Birth Cohort 1936:
rationale, design and methodology of the imaging protocol. International Journal of Stroke, 6, 547-
559.
LBC1936 brain MRI data were acquired at the University of Edinburgh’s Brain Research Imaging
Centre using a GE Signa Horizon HDx 1.5T clinical scanner, with a self-shielding gradient set (33
mT/m maximum gradient strength), and a manufacturer-supplied eight-channel phased-array head
coil. T1-, T2-, T2* and FLAIR-weighted structural scans were acquired for each participant. Each T1-
weighted scan was acquired in the coronal plane using a three-dimensional inversion-recovery-
prepared fast-spoiled gradient-echo sequence. Volumes comprised 160 1.3 mm thick slices with a
resolution of 1 mm2 and a 256 mm2 field of view, covering the complete intracranial contents. Cortical
parcellation was performed using FreeSurfer 5.1, and output was visually quality checked and
manually edited.
Ref:
Wardlaw JM, Bastin ME, Valdes Hernandez MC, et al. Brain aging, cognition in youth and old age
and vascular disease in the Lothian Birth Cohort 1936: rationale, design and methodology of the
imaging protocol. International journal of stroke : official journal of the International Stroke Society
2011;6:547-559.
FIDMAG
1. Brief introduction, funding with ethical standards
Healthy individuals were recruited from non-medical staff working in the hospital, their relatives and
acquaintances, plus independent sources in the community, in order to be included in healthy control
groups of several studies of specific disorders such as schizophrenia or ADHD (see some references
below).
Participants were questioned following a structured format and were excluded if they reported a
history of mental illness, history of major mental illness in a first-degree relative and/or treatment with
psychotropic medication apart from non-habitual use of anxiolytics/hypnotics.
Written informed consent was obtained from all participants. All studies were approved by the local
research ethics committee.
Self report.
MRI data were acquired with the same 1.5-T GE Signa scanner using the same T1-weighted sequence
with the following parameters: 180 axial slices, 1 mm slice thickness with no gap, 512×512 matrix
size, 0.5×0.5×1 mm3 voxel resolution, 4 ms echo time, 2000 ms repetition time, 15° flip angle.
FreeSurfer version 5.3 was used.
References
● Landin-Romero R, Amann BL, Sarro S, et al. Midline Brain Abnormalities Across Psychotic
and Mood Disorders. Schizophr Bull. 2016;42(1):229-238.
● Landin-Romero R, Sarro S, Fernandez-Corcuera P, et al. Prevalence of cavum vergae in
psychosis and mood spectrum disorders. J Affect Disord. 2015;186:53-57.
● Moreno-Alcazar A, Ramos-Quiroga JA, Radua J, et al. Brain abnormalities in adults with
Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder revealed by voxel-based morphometry. Psychiatry
Res. 2016;254:41-47.
● Radua J, Canales-Rodriguez EJ, Pomarol-Clotet E, Salvador R. Validity of modulation and
optimal settings for advanced voxel-based morphometry. Neuroimage. 2014;86:81-90.
● Vicens V, Radua J, Salvador R, et al. Structural and functional brain changes in delusional
disorder. Br J Psychiatry. 2016;208(2):153-159.
ACPU
Project Name: ADHD_ACPU
Self-report.
Self-report.
Inapplicable.
Glasser, M. F. et al. The minimal preprocessing pipelines for the Human Connectome Project.
Neuroimage 80, 105–124 (2013).
Acknowledgements
ENIGMA Center. P.M.T., N.J., and D.P.H. were supported in part by a grant from the NIH Big Data
to Knowledge (BD2K) Program (U54 EB020403).
Addiction_Cousijn. This study investigated the predictive role of neurocognitive functions in the
progression from cannabis use to dependence in at-risk young adults. JC & AG received funding for
the Cannabis Prospective study from ZonMW grant no.31180002 from the Netherlands Organization
for Scientific Research (NWO)
Addiction_DStein. The Meth-CT studies investigate structural and functional brain alterations in
methamphetamine-dependent individuals compared to healthy controls, and the neural underpinnings
of psychotic symptoms. Research was supported by the Department of Psychiatry and Mental Health
and the Human Research Ethics Committee, University of Cape Town, and the Medical Research
Council, South Africa.
Addiction_EStein. Data collection was supported by the Intramural Research Program of NIDA/NIH.
Addiction_Foxe. These projects studied cognitive control and reward processing in current and
abstinent cocaine users. HG & JF received funds from NIDA: R01-DA014100
Addiction_Garavan. This data was supported by USPHS grant from the National Institute on Drug
Abuse: DA01865-01, Australian Research Council Grant (RH) DP0556602 and Australian National
Health and Medical Research Council Career Development Award 519730 (RH).
Addiction_London. These projects examined how structural and functional brain abnormalities were
associated with attention, working memory (R01DA015179, EDL), response inhibition, cognitive
flexibility and decision making in methamphetamine users (R01DA020726, P20DA022539, EDL).
Additional support for these projects came from the Thomas P. and Katherine K. Pike Chair in
Addiction Studies and the Endowment from the Marjorie Greene Family Trust (EDL).
Addiction_Luijten. ML & DV received funding for the DABIS study from VIDI grant no.016.08.322
from the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) awarded to Ingmar H A Franken.
Addiction_NESDA-AD. ZS & DV received funding for the NESDA-AD study from ZonMW grant
no. 31160004 from the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO).
Addiction_NIAAA. Data collection by RM was supported by the Intramural Clinical and Biological
Research (DICBR) Program of the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA),
National Institutes of Health.
Addiction_Orr. The study was approved by the School of Psychology in Trinity College Dublin and
was conducted in accordance with the declaration of Helsinki.
CliNG. Recruitment for the CliNG study sample was partially supported by the Deutsche
Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) via the Clinical Research Group 241 ‘Genotype-phenotype
relationships and neurobiology of the longitudinal course of psychosis’, TP2 (PI Gruber;
http://www.kfo241.de; grant number GR 1950/5-1).
CODE. The CODE cohort was collected from studies funded by Lundbeck and the German Research
Foundation (WA 1539/4-1, SCHN 1205/3-1, SCHR 443/11-1).
Colm_UCSF. This work was supported by the Brain and Behavior Research Foundation grant
(formerly NARSAD) to T.T.Y. and by a US National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) grant to
T.T.Y. (R01MH085734).
DIP GRONINGEN. Data collection for DIP, as contributed to ENIGMA projects, was funded by the
Gratama Foundation, the Netherlands.
EPIGEN-Ireland. The work was supported by research grants from the Science Foundation Ireland
(Research Frontiers Program award 08/RFP/GEN1538) and Brainwave–the Irish Epilepsy
Association.
ESTADO-NARSAD. The present investigation was supported by a 2010 NARSAD Independent
Investigator Award (NARSAD: The Brain and Behavior Research Fund) awarded to Geraldo F.
Busatto. Geraldo F. Busatto is also partially funded by CNPq-Brazil. Marcus V. Zanetti is funded by
FAPESP, Brazil (no. 2013/03905-4).
GBB. This research was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (31271087;
31470981; 31571137; 31500885), National Outstanding young people plan, the Program for the Top
Young Talents by Chongqing, the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities
(SWU1509383,SWU1509451), Natural Science Foundation of Chongqing (cstc2015jcyjA10106), Fok
Ying Tung Education Foundation (151023) , General Financial Grant from the China Postdoctoral
Science Foundation (2015M572423, 2015M580767), Special Funds from the Chongqing Postdoctoral
Science Foundation (Xm2015037), Key research for Humanities and social sciences of Ministry of
Education(14JJD880009).
GEB^2. The project was supported by National Natural Science Foundation of China (31230031,
31221003, 31471067, 31470055).
JPCapeTown. This work was supported by the Medical Research Council of South Africa, the
Obsessive-Compulsive Foundation (Dan J. Stein), the National Research Foundation of South Africa
(Christine Lochner), and an unrestricted grant from Lundbeck H/S, and we acknowledge the
contribution of our research assistants.
Lothian Birth Cohort. Data collection was supported by the Disconnected Mind project, funded by
Age UK. J.M.W. is partly funded by the Scottish Funding Council as part of the SINAPSE
Collaboration. The work was undertaken by The University of Edinburgh Centre for Cognitive Ageing
and Cognitive Epidemiology, part of the cross-council Lifelong Health and Wellbeing Initiative
(MR/K026992/1). Funding from the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council
(BBSRC) and MRC is gratefully acknowledged. We thank the study participants. We also thank
Catherine Murray for recruitment of the participants and the radiographers and other staff at the Brain
Research Imaging Centre.
MacMasterMDD. Funding from the Halifax Stanley Centre. Support for this research in part from the
Cuthbertson and Fischer Chair in Paediatric Mental Health, the Alberta Children’s Hospital
Foundation, Alberta Children’s Hospital Research Institute for Child and Maternal Health, the
Mathison Centre for Mental Health Research & Education, the Hotchkiss Brain Institute, and the
University of Calgary.
MAS. We would like to acknowledge and thank the Sydney MAS participants, their supporters and
the Sydney MAS Research Team. Sydney MAS is supported by the National Health and Medical
Research Council (NHMRC) Program Grants (350833, 56896, 109308).
MCIC. This work was supported primarily by the Department of Energy DE-FG02-99ER62764
through its support of the Mind Research Network (MRN, formerly known as the MIND Institute) and
the consortium as well as by the National Association for Research in Schizophrenia and Affective
Disorders (NARSAD) Young Investigator Award (to SE) as well as through the Blowitz-Ridgeway
and Essel Foundations, and through NWO ZonMw TOP 91211021, the DFG research fellowship (to
SE), the Mind Research Network, National Institutes of Health through NCRR 5MO1-RR001066
(MGH General Clinical Research Center), NIMH K08 MH068540, the Biomedical Informatics
Research Network with NCRR Supplements to P41 RR14075 (MGH), M01 RR 01066 (MGH), NIBIB
R01EB006841 (MRN), R01EB005846 (MRN), 2R01 EB000840 (MRN), 1RC1MH089257 (MRN), as
well as grant U24 RR021992, P20RR021938/P20GM103472 and R01MH094524.
NESDA. The infrastructure for the NESDA study (http://www.nesda.nl) is funded through the
Geestkracht program of the Netherlands Organisation for Health Research and Development (Zon-
Mw, grant no 10-000-1002) and is supported by participating universities and mental health care
organizations (VU University Medical Center, GGZ inGeest, Arkin, Leiden University Medical
Center, GGZ Rivierduinen, University Medical Center Groningen, Lentis, GGZ Friesland, GGZ
Drenthe, Scientific Institute for Quality of Healthcare (IQ healthcare), Netherlands Institute for Health
Services Research (NIVEL) and Netherlands Institute of Mental Health and Addiction (Trimbos
Institute).
Neuro-ADAPT. OK received support for the Neuro-ADAPT study from VICI grant no. 453.08.01
from the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) awarded to Reinout W Wiers.
NeuroIMAGE. This work was supported by NIH Grant R01MH62873 (to Stephen V. Faraone),
NWO Large Investment Grant 1750102007010 and NWO Brain & Cognition an Integrative Approach
grant (433-09-242) (to Jan Buitelaar), and grants from Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Center,
University Medical Center Groningen and Accare, and VU University Amsterdam. The research
leading to these results also received funding from the European Community’s Seventh Framework
Programme (FP7/2007– 2013) under grant agreement numbers 278948 (TACTICS), 602450
(IMAGEMEND) and n° 602805 (Aggressotype), and from the European Community’s Horizon 2020
Programme (H2020/2014 – 2020) under grant agreement n° 643051 (MiND). Barbara Franke is
supported by a Vici grant from NWO (grant number 016-130-669). In addition, Jan Buitelaar and
Barbara Franke are supported by a grant for the ENIGMA Consortium (grant number U54 EB020403)
from the BD2K Initiative of a cross-NIH partnership.
NSIOCDS_1.5T_Adults. The structural MRI data were obtained as part of three funded projects
Government of India grants to the Wellcome-DBT India Alliance grant to Dr. Venkatasubramanian
(500236/Z/11/Z), Prof. Reddy (SR/S0/HS/0016/2011) and Dr. Narayanaswamy (DST INSPIRE
faculty grant -IFA12-LSBM-26) of the Department of Science and Technology; the Government of
India grants to Prof. Reddy No.BT/PR13334/Med/30/259/2009) and Dr. Narayanaswamy
(BT/06/IYBA/2012) of the Department of Biotechnology.
NSIOCDS_3T_Adults. The structural MRI data were obtained as part of three funded projects
Government of India grants to the Wellcome-DBT India Alliance grant to Dr. Venkatasubramanian
(500236/Z/11/Z), Prof. Reddy (SR/S0/HS/0016/2011) and Dr. Narayanaswamy (DST INSPIRE
faculty grant -IFA12-LSBM-26) of the Department of Science and Technology; the Government of
India grants to Prof. Reddy No.BT/PR13334/Med/30/259/2009) and Dr. Narayanaswamy
(BT/06/IYBA/2012) of the Department of Biotechnology.
NSIOCDS_3T_Child. The structural MRI data were obtained as part of three funded projects
Government of India grants to the Wellcome-DBT India Alliance grant to Dr. Venkatasubramanian
(500236/Z/11/Z), Prof. Reddy (SR/S0/HS/0016/2011) and Dr. Narayanaswamy (DST INSPIRE
faculty grant -IFA12-LSBM-26) of the Department of Science and Technology; the Government of
India grants to Prof. Reddy No.BT/PR13334/Med/30/259/2009) and Dr. Narayanaswamy
(BT/06/IYBA/2012) of the Department of Biotechnology.
NUIG. This NUI Galway study was supported by the NUI Galway Millennium Fund and grant
funding from the Health Research Board (HRA_POR/2011/100).
OATS. We would like to acknowledge and thank the OATS participants, their supporters and the
OATS Research Team. OATS is supported by a National Health and Medical Research Council
(NHMRC)/Australian Research Council Strategic Award (Grant 401162) and the NHMRC Project
Grant (1045325). OATS was facilitated through access to the Australian Twin Registry, which is
funded by the NHMRC Enabling Grant 310667.
OCD_Cheng_1.5T. This study was supported the Funding of Yunnan Provincial Health Science and
Technology Plan (2010NS016, 2011WS008), the united founding of Yunnan Administration of
Science & Technology and Kunming Medical College(2011FB167).
OCD_Cheng_3T. This study was supported by grants from National Natural Science Foundation of
China (NSFC) (81101005), the Ministry of Science and Technology of Yunnan
Province(2012FB158), the Funding of Yunnan Provincial Health Science and Technology Plan
(2014NS171, 2014NS172), the united founding of Yunnan Administration of Science & Technology
and Kunming Medical College(2011FB167).
OCD_Huyser. The studies were supported by a grant from the Amsterdam school of neuroscience
(ONWA) for scan costs.
OCD_Lazaro. The studies were supported by two grants from Marato_TV3 Foundation (01/2010,
091710).
OCD_Mataix-Cols. These structural scans come from a series of studies conducted at King’s College
London and funded by the Wellcome Trust (Mary L Phillips, PI) and a pump priming grant from the
South London and Maudsley Trust, London (project grant no. 064846; David Mataix-Cols PI).
OCD_VUmc 1.5T. Supported by the Dutch Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) (grants 912-
02-050, 907-00-012, 940-37-018, and 916.86.038).
OCD_VUmc 3T. Supported in part by the Netherlands Society for Scientific Research (NWO-
ZonMw VENI grant 916.86.036 to Dr. van den Heuvel; NWO-ZonMw AGIKO stipend 920-03-542 to
Dr. de Vries), and a NARSAD Young Investigators Award to Dr. van den Heuvel, Amsterdam Brain
Imaging Platform to Dr. van den Heuvel, the Netherlands Brain Foundation (2010(1)-50 to Dr. van
den Heuvel).
Oslo Malt. The study is funded by the Research Council of Norway (167153/V50, 204966/F20), the
South-Eastern Norway Regional Health Authority, Oslo University Hospital, and research grants from
Mrs. Aslaug Throne-Holst and from the Ebbe Frøland Foundation.
OXEOP. MRC funded grant number: G0500092 - Anatomical connectivity in early onset
schizophrenia
QTIM. QTIM is funded by the National Institutes of Health (project ROI HD HD050735; NIH Award
1U54EB020403-01, subaward no. 56929223) and the NHMRC (1009064, 496682). Ethics approval
was given by the Human Research Ethics Committees of the Queensland Institute of Medical
Research, University of Queensland, and Uniting Health Care. We thank the twins and siblings for
their participation, Marlene Grace and Ann Eldridge for twin recruitment, Aiman Al Najjar and other
radiographers for scanning, and Kerrie McAloney and Daniel Park for research support.
R_SCZ. The R_SCZ database has been supported by MHRC and by a research grant from The
Russian Foundation for Basic Research (grant code 15-06-05758 A; grantee Dr. Irina Lebedeva, PhD,
DrSci (biol), the head of the Laboratory of Neuroimaging and Multimodal analysis, MHRC).
SBP. The SBP is supported by grants from the Swedish Medical Research Council (K2014-62X-
14647-12-51, K2010-61P-21568-01-4, and K2013-61X-08276-26-4), the Swedish foundation for
Strategic Research (KF10-0039), the Swedish Brain foundation (FO2016-0176), and the Swedish
Federal Government under the LUA/ALF agreement (ALFGBG-426721).
Seoul I. This study was supported by the Korean Research Foundation (1998-003-F00172), Korean
Health Research and Development Grant (HMP-98-N-2-0029), Korea Research Foundation Grant
(KRF-2001-044-F00182), Korean Research Foundation (2001-041-F00182), Seoul National
University Hospital Research Fund (11-2003-001), and Brain Research Center of the 21st Century
Frontier Research Program by Ministry of Science and Technology of Republic of Korea
(M103KV010007 04K2201 007 10).
Seoul II. This study was supported by grants (M103KV010012-06K2201-01210, 2009K001270, and
2010K000817) from Brain Research Center of the 21st Century Frontier Research Program funded by
the Ministry of Science and Technology of the Republic of Korea, a grant (M10644020003-08N4402-
00310) from the Cognitive Neuroscience Program of the Korean Ministry of Science and Technology
of the Republic of Korea, the Korea Research Foundation grants funded by the Korean Government
(KRF-2007-313-E00306 and KRF-2008-313-E00341), World Class University program through the
Korea Science and Engineering Foundation funded by the Ministry of Education, Science and
Technology (R31-10089, and R32-10142), a grant from the Seoul National University Hospital
Research Fund (04-2008-104), and a grant from the National Research Foundation of Korea (2012-
0005150) funded by the Ministry of Education, Science and Technology (MEST) of the Republic of
Korea.
Seoul III. This study was supported by National Research Foundation of Korea grant funded by the
Ministry of Education, Science and Technology (MEST) of the Republic of Korea (2011-0015639 and
2012-0005150), a grant of the Korea Health Technology R&D Project, Ministry of Health & Welfare
of the Republic of Korea (A110094), and Basic Science Research Program through the National
Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) funded by the Ministry of Science, ICT and Future Planning
(2013R1A2A1A03071089).
SHIP. SHIP is part of the Community Medicine Research net of the University of Greifswald,
Germany, which is funded by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research (grants no. 01ZZ9603,
01ZZ0103, and 01ZZ0403), the Ministry of Cultural Affairs and the Social Ministry of the Federal
State of Mecklenburg-West Pomerania. MRI scans in SHIP have been supported by a joint grant from
Siemens Healthineers, Erlangen, Germany and the Federal State of Mecklenburg-West Pomerania.
SHIP-TREND. SHIP is part of the Community Medicine Research net of the University of
Greifswald, Germany, which is funded by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research (grants no.
01ZZ9603, 01ZZ0103, and 01ZZ0403), the Ministry of Cultural Affairs and the Social Ministry of the
Federal State of Mecklenburg-West Pomerania. MRI scans in SHIP-TREND have been supported by a
joint grant from Siemens Healthineers, Erlangen, Germany and the Federal State of Mecklenburg-
West Pomerania.
Stanford. The Stanford dataset was established with the support of NIMH Grant R01MH59259 to Ian
Gotlib, and the National Science Foundation Integrative Graduate Education and Research Traineeship
(NSF IGERT) Recipient Award 0801700 and National Science Foundation Graduate Research
Fellowship Program (NSF GRFP) DGE-1147470 to Matthew Sacchet.
Wellcome Study. This study was funded by the Wellcome Trust, UK.
Youth-TOP/NORMENT EOP. Funding is provided by the Norwegian Research Council (NFR), the
South-Eastern Norway Regional Health Authority and the KG Jebsen Foundation.
TOP3T_2. The TOP study was supported by the Research Council of Norway (#160181, 190311,
223273, 213837, 249711), the South-East Norway Health Authority (2014114, 2014097, 2017- 112),
and the Kristian Gerhard Jebsen Stiftelsen (SKGJ-MED-008) and the European Community's Seventh
Framework Programme (FP7/2007–2013), grant agreement no. 602450 (IMAGEMEND).
TOP1.5T. The TOP study was supported by the Research Council of Norway (#160181, 190311,
223273, 213837, 249711), the South-East Norway Health Authority (2014114, 2014097, 2017- 112),
and the Kristian Gerhard Jebsen Stiftelsen (SKGJ-MED-008) and the European Community's Seventh
Framework Programme (FP7/2007–2013), grant agreement no. 602450 (IMAGEMEND).
HUBIN_KASP. KaSP was supported by the Swedish Research Council (K2015-62X-15077-12-3),
and by grants from the Swedish Medical Research Council (SE: 2009-7053; 2013-2838; SC: 523-
2014-3467), the Swedish Brain Foundation, Åhlén-siftelsen, Svenska Läkaresällskapet, Petrus och
Augusta Hedlunds Stiftelse, Torsten Söderbergs Stiftelse, the AstraZeneca-Karolinska Institutet Joint
Research Program in Translational Science, Söderbergs Königska Stiftelse, Professor Bror Gadelius
Minne, Knut och Alice Wallenbergs stiftelse, Stockholm County Council (ALF and PPG), Centre for
Psychiatry Research, KID-funding from the Karolinska Institutet. The HUBIN study was supported by
the Swedish Research Council (grant numbers K2015-62X-15077-12-3), the regional agreement
between Karolinska Institutet and Stockholm County Council, the Karolinska Institutet and the Knut
and Alice Wallenberg Foundation.
Muenster. This work was funded by the German Research Foundation (SFB-TRR58, Project C09 to
UD) and the Interdisciplinary Center for Clinical Research (IZKF) of the medical faculty of Münster
(grant Dan3/012/17 to UD).
FOR2107. This work was funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG, grant FOR2107 KI
588/14-1 to TK, KO4291/3-1 to AK and DA1151/5-1 to UD).
FIDMAG-Barcelona. This work was supported by the Catalonian Government (2014-SGR-1573) and
by the Plan Nacional de I+D+i 2008–2011 and 2013–2016: Juan de la Cierva-formación contract
(FJCI-2015-25278 to PF-C). Also by the Instituto de Salud Carlos III and co-funded by European
Union (ERDF/ESF, “Investing in your future”): Miguel Servet Research Contracts (MS14/00041 to JR
and CPII16/00264 to EP-C) and Research Project Grants (PI15/00277 to EC-R, PI11/01766 and
PI14/00292 to JR, PI14/01148 to EP-C and PI14/01151 to RS).
ADHD-ACPU. Scans taken as part of National competitive research grant funding awarded to
Alasdair Vance and Timothy Silk.
ADHD_NICAP. The study was funded by the National Medical Health and Research Council of
Australia (NHMRC; project grant #1065895).
ADHD_OHSU. The OHSU dataset was established through several Foundation grants and grants
from the National Institutes of Health: R01 MH115357 (MPI: Fair, Nigg), R56 MH086654 (MPI:
Nigg, Fair), R01 MH086654 (PI: Nigg), R01 MH099064 (PI: Nigg), R01 MH096773 (PI: Fair),
DeStefano Family Innovation Fund (PI: Fair), R00 MH091238 (PI: Fair), Oregon Clinical and
Translational Research Institute (UL1TR000128).
ADHD_UCHZ. This work was supported by the University Research Priority Program “Integrative
Human Physiology” at the University of Zurich.
ADHD_Dundee. This work was supported by a Tenovus-Scotland initiative (a local trust) and by
SINAPSE (www.sinapse.ac.uk), which included a SINAPSE-SPIRIT industry partnership with
Siemens Medical (a SINAPSE studentship for Blair Johnston).
TOP3T_1. The TOP study was supported by the Research Council of Norway (#160181, 190311,
223273, 213837, 249711), the South-East Norway Health Authority (2014114, 2014097, 2017- 112),
and the Kristian Gerhard Jebsen Stiftelsen (SKGJ-MED-008) and the European Community's Seventh
Framework Programme (FP7/2007–2013), grant agreement no. 602450 (IMAGEMEND).
ADHD_IMPACTNL. This study was supported by grants from the Netherlands Organization
for Scientific Research (NWO), i.e. the NWO Brain & Cognition Excellence Program (grant
433-09-229) and a Vici grant to BF (grant 016-130-669), and by grants from the Netherlands
Brain Foundation (grant 15F07[2]27) and BBMRI-NL (grant CP2010-33). The research
leading to these results also received funding from the European Community’s Seventh
Framework Programme (FP7/2007 – 2013) under grant agreements n° 602805 (Aggressotype)
and n° 602450 (IMAGEMEND), and from the European Community’s Horizon 2020
Programme (H2020/2014 – 2020) under grant agreement n° 643051 (MiND). In addition, the
work was supported by a grant for the ENIGMA Consortium (grant number U54 EB020403)
from the BD2K Initiative of a cross-NIH partnership.
ADHD_MTA. Data collection was funded in part by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (Contract
#: HHSN271200800009C).
COBRE. This research was supported by NIH1R01-EB006841, NIH1R01-EB005846, NIH2R01-
EB000840, NIH1 P20 RR021938-01 and DOEDEFG02-08ER64581 (to VDC); the national high tech
development plan (863 plan) 2015AA020513 (to JS); R01 MH65304 and VA CSR&D IIR-04-212-3
(to JMC). TW is supported by the Netherlands Organization for Health Research and Development
(ZonMw) TOP project number 91211021 and the Simons Foundation Autism Research Initiative
(SFARI - 307280).
SI Conflicts of interest
The ENIGMA co-authors declare no conflicts of interest except for the authors below:
Theo Van Erp consulted for Roche Pharmaceuticals and has a contract with Otsuka Pharmaceutical, Ltd.
Anders Dale is a Founder of CorTechs Labs, Inc. He serves on the Scientific Advisory Boards of
CorTechs Labs and Human Longevity, Inc., and receives research funding through a Research
Stephen Faraone received income, potential income, travel expenses continuing education support
and/or research support from Lundbeck, KenPharm, Rhodes, Arbor, Ironshore, Shire, Akili Interactive
Labs, CogCubed, Alcobra, VAYA, Sunovion, Genomind and NeuroLifeSciences. With his institution,
he has US patent US20130217707 A1 for the use of sodium-hydrogen exchange inhibitors in the
treatment of ADHD.
Paulo Mattos was on the speakers’ bureau and/or acted as consultant for Janssen-Cilag, Novartis, and
Shire in the previous five years; he also received travel awards to participate in scientific meetings from
those companies. The ADHD outpatient program (Grupo de Estudos do Déficit de Atenção/Institute of
Psychiatry) chaired by Dr. Mattos has also received research support from Novartis and Shire.The
funding sources had no role in the design and conduct of the study; collection, management, analysis,
Tobias Banaschewski served in an advisory or consultancy role for Hexal Pharma, Lilly, Medice,
Novartis, Oxford outcomes, PCM scientific, Shire and Viforpharma. He received conference support or
speaker’s fee by Janssen McNeil, Lilly, Medice, Novartis and Shire. He is/has been involved in clinical
trials conducted by Shire & Viforpharma. The present work is unrelated to the above grants and
relationships.
Katya Rubia received speaker's fees form Shire, Medice and a grant from Lilly for another project.
Jan Haavik has received speaker fees from Lilly, Novartis and Janssen Cilag.
Steve Faraone has received income, travel expenses and/or research support from, and/or has been on
an Advisory Board for, and/or participated in continuing medical education programs sponsored by:
Pfizer, Ironshore, Shire, Akili Interactive Labs, CogCubed, Alcobra, VAYA Pharma, Neurovance,
Impax, NeuroLifeSciences, Otsuka, McNeil, Janssen, Novartis, Eli Lilly and the NIH. With his
institution, he has US patent US20130217707 A1 for the use of sodium-hydrogen exchange inhibitors
in the treatment of ADHD. He receives royalties from books published by Guilford Press: Straight Talk
about Your Child’s Mental Health; Oxford University Press: Schizophrenia: The Facts; Elsevier, ADHD:
Non-Pharmacologic Treatments
Kerstin Konrad received speaking fees from Medice, Lilly and Shire.
Josep-Antoni Ramos was on the speakers’ bureau and/or acted as consultant for Eli-Lilly, Janssen-Cilag,
Novartis, Shire, Lundbeck, Almirall and Rubió in the last 3 years. He also received travel awards (air
tickets + hotel) for taking part in psychiatric meetings from Janssen-Cilag, Rubió, Shire, and Eli- Lilly.
The ADHD Program chaired by him received unrestricted educational and research support from the
following pharmaceutical companies in the last 3 years: Eli-Lilly, Rovi, Ferrer, Lundbeck, Shire, and
Rubió.
Pieter Hoekstra received a research grant from Shire and was part of the advisory board of Shire.
Jan Buitelaar has been in the past 3 years a consultant to / member of advisory board of / and/or speaker
for Janssen Cilag BV, Eli Lilly, Medice, Shire, Roche, and Servier. He is not an employee of any of
these companies, and not a stock shareholder of any of these companies. He has no other financial or
David Coghill has been in the past 3 years a consultant to / member of advisory board of / and/or speaker
for Janssen Cilag, Eli Lilly, Medice, Shire, Novartis. He receives royalties from Oxford University Press.
He is not an employee of any of these companies, and not a stock shareholder of any of these companies.
D.P.H. is now a Senior Scientist for Janssen, Inc., but his work for this manuscript was completed while
the following additional sources: Abbott, Alza, APSARD, AstraZeneca, Boston University, Bristol
Myers Squibb, Cambridge University Press, Celltech, Cephalon, The Children’s Hospital of Southwest
Florida/Lee Memorial Health System, Cipher Pharmaceuticals Inc., Eli Lilly and Co., Esai, ElMindA,
Fundacion Areces (Spain), Forest, Fundación Dr.Manuel Camelo A.C., Glaxo, Gliatech, Hastings
Center, Janssen, Juste Pharmaceutical Spain, McNeil, Medice Pharmaceuticals (Germany), Merck,
MGH Psychiatry Academy, MMC Pediatric, NARSAD, NIDA, New River, NICHD, NIMH, Novartis,
Academy, The Prechter Foundation, Quantia Communications, Reed Exhibitions, Shionogi Pharma Inc,
Shire, the Spanish Child Psychiatry Association, The Stanley Foundation, UCB Pharma Inc., Veritas,
and Wyeth.
Henry Brodaty is on the Advisory Board for Nutricia and has conducted an Alzheimer’s drug trial for
Tau Therapeutics.