Neurosciences and Mental Health

Professor Alistair Compston and Professor Peter Jones
Neurosciences (external link)
Mental Health
The overall research mission of the Department is to combine a detailed neuroscientific understanding of the brain mechanisms for cognition and symptoms with a broad awareness of genetic and phenotypic variability in the population over the course of the life-cycle. In short, we aim to do population neuroscience.
We aim to bring together several key research disciplines to achieve this strategy including cognitive neuropsychology and neuroscience, neuroimaging and brain mapping, developmentally-orientated epidemiology, and molecular genetics and neuropathology.
Day-to-day research activity is managed in the context of five main research groups. Interaction between groups is facilitated by the Department's research seminar programme and by the biennial half-day retreats initiated to promote interdisciplinary communication and understanding
Key research areas
Cognitive neuropsychology and neuropsychiatry
Clinical and experimental studies of psychiatric disorder (including substances abuse, ADHD, schizophrenia, OCD), Huntington's disease, Parkinson's disease and brain damage, memory disorders, sleep disorders and seizure disorders, using psychopharmacological approaches, functional brain imaging with PET and functional MRI and genetic subtyping (Prof BJ Sahakian, Prof ET Bullmore, Dr PC Fletcher, Prof FA Huppert, Dr H Ring, Dr U Muller)
Depression, mania and related affective disorders
Cognitive, neuroendocrine, neuroimaging and genetic studies. Psychosocial and epidemiological aspects, clinical anti-depressant studies (Prof PB Jones, Prof IM Goodyer, Prof BJ Sahakian, Dr B Lennox, Dr Paul Wilkinson)
Well-being and health neuroscience
Cohort studies of the relationships between cognition, emotion, and health outcomes, with a positive psychology focus. Clinical and experimental studies of neural processes in emotional decision-making. Life-course epidemiology, neuroendocrinology, neuroimaging and genetic approaches (Prof FA Huppert, Prof BJ Sahakian, Dr TJ Croudace, Prof ET Bullmore, Dr PC Fletcher)
Schizophrenia and psychosis
Studies into causation including factors operating in early life, epidemiology, neuroimaging, neuropsychology and treatment (Prof PB Jones, Prof ET Bullmore, Dr TJ Croudace, Dr B Lennox, Dr G Murray)
Social psychiatry and psychiatric epidemiology
Analysis of national and international longitudinal studies to establish risk and protective factors. Psychometric evaluation of assessment instruments and application of repeat-measures analysis (Prof PB Jones, Dr TJ Croudace).
Developmental neuropsychiatry
Studies of childhood depression, autism and language disorders using neuroendocrine, neuroimaging, epidemiological and genetic approaches. The Department houses the Autism Research Centre (Prof S Baron-Cohen, Prof IM Goodyer, Dr H Ring)
Learning disabilities
Interdisciplinary research including the biological, behavioural and social sciences and academic legal studies covering the following main themes:
1. developmental outcomes of people with specific syndromes associated with learning disabilities including Prader-Willi Syndrome and Down's Syndrome;
2. clinical, ethical and legal issues relevant to health and social care practice in the field of learning disability;
3. people with learning and other developmental disabilities (such as autistic spectrum disorders), in the criminal justice, mental health, and other systems;
4. citizenship and advocacy
5. the neuropsychiatry of autistic spectrum disorder; and
6. the presentation and treatment of epilepsy in people with learning disability.
The Learning Disability Research Group is a member of the Centre for Participation that brings together people with learning disabilities and members of the University and statutory services to promote research in this field. The group also presently hosts the Eastern Region Learning Disability Research Network. (Prof AJ Holland, Dr H Ring, Dr M Redley, Dr ICH Clare)
Adult Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder
Neuropsychological and drug treatment studies of adults attending the ADHD Clinic (Dr U Muller, Prof BJ Sahakian)
Normal ageing, Alzheimer's disease and other neurodegenerative disorders
Clinical and population-based studies of cognitive ageing and mental health, examining psychosocial determinants and neurobiological mechanisms of healthy and pathological ageing. Neuroimaging studies of age differences in cognitive function (Prof FA Huppert, Prof BJ Sahakian, Dr PC Fletcher, Prof ET Bullmore, Prof AJ Holland)
Mental health services research
RCTs in clinical and health service interventions. Clinical information system (register-based) research, including Mental Health Minimum Data and routine outcome measurement (Dr TJ Croudace, Prof PB Jones, Prof IM Goodyer)
Research collaborations
Extensive interactions and ongoing collaborative projects with other University Departments, including Experimental Psychology, Institute of Public Health, Medical Genetics, Clinical Neuroscience, Institute of Criminology, Social and Political Sciences, History and Philosophy of Science, as well as the MRC/Wellcome Trust Behaivoural and Clinical Neurosciences Institute (BCNI), the MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, the MRC Biostatistics Unit, the Cambridge Centre for Brain Repair and the Wolfson Brain Imaging Centre. We have many national, international and industrial collaborations.
