Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.The aims of this survey series are to ascertain : the proportion of the population who are involved in voluntary activity in the UK; the type of people most likely to volunteer; the types of activities in which volunteers are engaged; the motivations for volunteering; the benefits and drawbacks of voluntary work. The 1997 survey was carried out by BMRB International on behalf of the National Centre for Volunteering (formerly the Volunteer Centre). The need to compare trends in voluntary activity over time required that the survey was to a large extent a repeat of the previous surveys conducted by SCPR in 1981 and 1991, although some new topics were covered. A research project was carried out by the National Centre for Social Research in partnership with the Institute for Volunteering Research in 2006/7, as a follow-up to the Citizenship Survey, 2005. The resulting study, the National Survey of Volunteering and Charitable Giving, 2006-2007, is held at the UKDA under SN 5793. Main Topics: The survey covered the following subjects : working status; voluntary activity connected with work; marital status, disabilities and caring responsibilities; formal volunteering; organisation or group helped most, and most in past year (current and previous volunteers); barriers to volunteering and attitudes of irregular or former volunteers; informal volunteering; attitudes towards voluntary workers, and our society's attitudes towards them; receipt of voluntary help; donations. Users should note, a few variables on the questionnaire are not included in the dataset if they were used to create derived variables. There are many derived variables included (particularly in Section 4 of the questionnaire). Comparison of the topline and the questionnaire of the technical report is recommended for Section 4. Multi-stage stratified random sample CAPI was used. Face-to-face interview 1997 ACHIEVEMENT ADVICE AGE ASSOCIATIONS ATTITUDES BRITISH POLITICAL P... BUILDING MAINTENANCE CARE OF DEPENDANTS CARE OF THE DISABLED CARE OF THE ELDERLY CHARITABLE ORGANIZA... CHILD MINDING CHILDREN CHRONIC ILLNESS CLUBS COMMITTEES COMMUNITY ACTION COMMUNITY BEHAVIOUR COMMUNITY SERVICE P... COMMUNITY WORK COMMUTING CONSERVATIVE PARTY ... CONTEMPORARY SOCIETY COOKING COUNSELLING CRIMINAL RECORD DECISION MAKING DISABILITIES DOMESTIC RESPONSIBI... DRIVING ECONOMIC ACTIVITY EDUCATIONAL ASSOCIA... EDUCATIONAL BACKGROUND ELDERLY EMPLOYEES EMPLOYERS EMPLOYMENT HISTORY EMPLOYMENT PROGRAMMES ENVIRONMENT ENVIRONMENTAL CONSE... ETHNIC GROUPS FAITH BASED CHARITA... FAMILIES FAMILY MEMBERS FEES FINANCIAL SUPPORT FRIENDS FUND RAISING GARDENING GIFTS GROUPS HOURS OF WORK HOUSEHOLD PETS HOUSEHOLDS HOUSEWORK INCOME INDUSTRIES INSURANCE INTERVIEWING FOR JOB JOB DESCRIPTION JOB HUNTING LABOUR PARTY GREAT ... LIBERAL DEMOCRATS G... LOTTERIES MANAGERS MARITAL STATUS MASS MEDIA MEALS ON WHEELS MEMBERSHIP MOTOR VEHICLES NEIGHBOURHOODS NEIGHBOURS NEWSPAPERS OCCUPATIONS OLD AGE ORGANIZATIONS OVERTIME PARENT TEACHER ASSO... PHILANTHROPY PLACE OF RESIDENCE POLITICAL ALLEGIANCE PRESCHOOL CHILDREN PRIVATE SECTOR PROFESSIONAL ASSOCI... PUBLIC SECTOR QUALIFICATIONS QUALITY RECIDIVISM RELIGIOUS COMMUNITIES RESIDENTIAL MOBILITY RETIREMENT SATISFACTION SELF EMPLOYED SHOPPING SICK PERSONS SOCIAL PARTICIPATION SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY SOCIAL SUPPORT SOCIAL SYSTEMS SOCIAL WELFARE ORGA... SPORTS CLUBS SPOUSE S ECONOMIC A... SPOUSE S OCCUPATION SPOUSES STATE RESPONSIBILITY STUDENTS SUPERVISORS Social welfare poli... TIME TRADE UNION MEMBERSHIP TRADE UNION OFFICIALS TRADE UNIONS TRAINING TRANSPORT TRAVELLING TIME UNEMPLOYED UNEMPLOYMENT UNWAGED WORKERS VISITS PERSONAL VOLUNTARY ORGANIZAT... VOLUNTARY WELFARE O... VOLUNTARY WORK YOUTH YOUTH ORGANIZATIONS
CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
License information was derived automatically
Modality-agnostic files were copied over and the CHANGES
file was updated.
A comprehensive clinical, MRI, and MEG collection characterizing healthy research volunteers collected at the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) Intramural Research Program (IRP) in Bethesda, Maryland using medical and mental health assessments, diagnostic and dimensional measures of mental health, cognitive and neuropsychological functioning, structural and functional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), along with diffusion tensor imaging (DTI), and a comprehensive magnetoencephalography battery (MEG).
In addition, blood samples are currently banked for future genetic analysis. All data collected in this protocol are broadly shared in the OpenNeuro repository, in the Brain Imaging Data Structure (BIDS) format. In addition, blood samples of healthy volunteers are banked for future analyses. All data collected in this protocol are broadly shared here, in the Brain Imaging Data Structure (BIDS) format. In addition, task paradigms and basic pre-processing scripts are shared on GitHub. This dataset is unique in its depth of characterization of a healthy population in terms of brain health and will contribute to a wide array of secondary investigations of non-clinical and clinical research questions.
This dataset is licensed under the Creative Commons Zero (CC0) v1.0 License.
Inclusion criteria for the study require that participants are adults at or over 18 years of age in good health with the ability to read, speak, understand, and provide consent in English. All participants provided electronic informed consent for online screening and written informed consent for all other procedures. Exclusion criteria include:
Study participants are recruited through direct mailings, bulletin boards and listservs, outreach exhibits, print advertisements, and electronic media.
All potential volunteers first visit the study website (https://nimhresearchvolunteer.ctss.nih.gov), check a box indicating consent, and complete preliminary self-report screening questionnaires. The study website is HIPAA compliant and therefore does not collect PII ; instead, participants are instructed to contact the study team to provide their identity and contact information. The questionnaires include demographics, clinical history including medications, disability status (WHODAS 2.0), mental health symptoms (modified DSM-5 Self-Rated Level 1 Cross-Cutting Symptom Measure), substance use survey (DSM-5 Level 2), alcohol use (AUDIT), handedness (Edinburgh Handedness Inventory), and perceived health ratings. At the conclusion of the questionnaires, participants are again prompted to send an email to the study team. Survey results, supplemented by NIH medical records review (if present), are reviewed by the study team, who determine if the participant is likely eligible for the protocol. These participants are then scheduled for an in-person assessment. Follow-up phone screenings were also used to determine if participants were eligible for in-person screening.
At this visit, participants undergo a comprehensive clinical evaluation to determine final eligibility to be included as a healthy research volunteer. The mental health evaluation consists of a psychiatric diagnostic interview (Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-5 Disorders (SCID-5), along with self-report surveys of mood (Beck Depression Inventory-II (BD-II) and anxiety (Beck Anxiety Inventory, BAI) symptoms. An intelligence quotient (IQ) estimation is determined with the Kaufman Brief Intelligence Test, Second Edition (KBIT-2). The KBIT-2 is a brief (20-30 minute) assessment of intellectual functioning administered by a trained examiner. There are three subtests, including verbal knowledge, riddles, and matrices.
Medical evaluation includes medical history elicitation and systematic review of systems. Biological and physiological measures include vital signs (blood pressure, pulse), as well as weight, height, and BMI. Blood and urine samples are taken and a complete blood count, acute care panel, hepatic panel, thyroid stimulating hormone, viral markers (HCV, HBV, HIV), C-reactive protein, creatine kinase, urine drug screen and urine pregnancy tests are performed. In addition, blood samples that can be used for future genomic analysis, development of lymphoblastic cell lines or other biomarker measures are collected and banked with the NIMH Repository and Genomics Resource (Infinity BiologiX). The Family Interview for Genetic Studies (FIGS) was later added to the assessment in order to provide better pedigree information; the Adverse Childhood Events (ACEs) survey was also added to better characterize potential risk factors for psychopathology. The entirety of the in-person assessment not only collects information relevant for eligibility determination, but it also provides a comprehensive set of standardized clinical measures of volunteer health that can be used for secondary research.
Participants are given the option to consent for a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan, which can serve as a baseline clinical scan to determine normative brain structure, and also as a research scan with the addition of functional sequences (resting state and diffusion tensor imaging). The MR protocol used was initially based on the ADNI-3 basic protocol, but was later modified to include portions of the ABCD protocol in the following manner:
At the time of the MRI scan, volunteers are administered a subset of tasks from the NIH Toolbox Cognition Battery. The four tasks include:
An optional MEG study was added to the protocol approximately one year after the study was initiated, thus there are relatively fewer MEG recordings in comparison to the MRI dataset. MEG studies are performed on a 275 channel CTF MEG system (CTF MEG, Coquiltam BC, Canada). The position of the head was localized at the beginning and end of each recording using three fiducial coils. These coils were placed 1.5 cm above the nasion, and at each ear, 1.5 cm from the tragus on a line between the tragus and the outer canthus of the eye. For 48 participants (as of 2/1/2022), photographs were taken of the three coils and used to mark the points on the T1 weighted structural MRI scan for co-registration. For the remainder of the participants (n=16 as of 2/1/2022), a Brainsight neuronavigation system (Rogue Research, Montréal, Québec, Canada) was used to coregister the MRI and fiducial localizer coils in realtime prior to MEG data acquisition.
Online and In-person behavioral and clinical measures, along with the corresponding phenotype file name, sorted first by measurement location and then by file name.
Location | Measure | File Name |
---|---|---|
Online | Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT) | audit |
Demographics | demographics | |
DSM-5 Level 2 Substance Use - Adult | drug_use | |
Edinburgh Handedness Inventory (EHI) | ehi | |
Health History Form | health_history_questions | |
Perceived Health Rating - self | health_rating | |
DSM-5 Self-Rated Level 1 Cross-Cutting Symptoms Measure – Adult (modified) | mental_health_questions | |
World Health Organization Disability Assessment Schedule |
CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
License information was derived automatically
Modality-agnostic files were copied over and the CHANGES
file was updated. Data was segregated using:
python phenotype.py segregate subject -i ds003982 -o segregated_subject
phenotype.py
came from the GitHub repository: https://github.com/ericearl/bids-phenotype
A comprehensive clinical, MRI, and MEG collection characterizing healthy research volunteers collected at the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) Intramural Research Program (IRP) in Bethesda, Maryland using medical and mental health assessments, diagnostic and dimensional measures of mental health, cognitive and neuropsychological functioning, structural and functional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), along with diffusion tensor imaging (DTI), and a comprehensive magnetoencephalography battery (MEG).
In addition, blood samples are currently banked for future genetic analysis. All data collected in this protocol are broadly shared in the OpenNeuro repository, in the Brain Imaging Data Structure (BIDS) format. In addition, blood samples of healthy volunteers are banked for future analyses. All data collected in this protocol are broadly shared here, in the Brain Imaging Data Structure (BIDS) format. In addition, task paradigms and basic pre-processing scripts are shared on GitHub. This dataset is unique in its depth of characterization of a healthy population in terms of brain health and will contribute to a wide array of secondary investigations of non-clinical and clinical research questions.
This dataset is licensed under the Creative Commons Zero (CC0) v1.0 License.
Inclusion criteria for the study require that participants are adults at or over 18 years of age in good health with the ability to read, speak, understand, and provide consent in English. All participants provided electronic informed consent for online screening and written informed consent for all other procedures. Exclusion criteria include:
Study participants are recruited through direct mailings, bulletin boards and listservs, outreach exhibits, print advertisements, and electronic media.
All potential volunteers first visit the study website (https://nimhresearchvolunteer.ctss.nih.gov), check a box indicating consent, and complete preliminary self-report screening questionnaires. The study website is HIPAA compliant and therefore does not collect PII ; instead, participants are instructed to contact the study team to provide their identity and contact information. The questionnaires include demographics, clinical history including medications, disability status (WHODAS 2.0), mental health symptoms (modified DSM-5 Self-Rated Level 1 Cross-Cutting Symptom Measure), substance use survey (DSM-5 Level 2), alcohol use (AUDIT), handedness (Edinburgh Handedness Inventory), and perceived health ratings. At the conclusion of the questionnaires, participants are again prompted to send an email to the study team. Survey results, supplemented by NIH medical records review (if present), are reviewed by the study team, who determine if the participant is likely eligible for the protocol. These participants are then scheduled for an in-person assessment. Follow-up phone screenings were also used to determine if participants were eligible for in-person screening.
At this visit, participants undergo a comprehensive clinical evaluation to determine final eligibility to be included as a healthy research volunteer. The mental health evaluation consists of a psychiatric diagnostic interview (Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-5 Disorders (SCID-5), along with self-report surveys of mood (Beck Depression Inventory-II (BD-II) and anxiety (Beck Anxiety Inventory, BAI) symptoms. An intelligence quotient (IQ) estimation is determined with the Kaufman Brief Intelligence Test, Second Edition (KBIT-2). The KBIT-2 is a brief (20-30 minute) assessment of intellectual functioning administered by a trained examiner. There are three subtests, including verbal knowledge, riddles, and matrices.
Medical evaluation includes medical history elicitation and systematic review of systems. Biological and physiological measures include vital signs (blood pressure, pulse), as well as weight, height, and BMI. Blood and urine samples are taken and a complete blood count, acute care panel, hepatic panel, thyroid stimulating hormone, viral markers (HCV, HBV, HIV), C-reactive protein, creatine kinase, urine drug screen and urine pregnancy tests are performed. In addition, blood samples that can be used for future genomic analysis, development of lymphoblastic cell lines or other biomarker measures are collected and banked with the NIMH Repository and Genomics Resource (Infinity BiologiX). The Family Interview for Genetic Studies (FIGS) was later added to the assessment in order to provide better pedigree information; the Adverse Childhood Events (ACEs) survey was also added to better characterize potential risk factors for psychopathology. The entirety of the in-person assessment not only collects information relevant for eligibility determination, but it also provides a comprehensive set of standardized clinical measures of volunteer health that can be used for secondary research.
Participants are given the option to consent for a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan, which can serve as a baseline clinical scan to determine normative brain structure, and also as a research scan with the addition of functional sequences (resting state and diffusion tensor imaging). The MR protocol used was initially based on the ADNI-3 basic protocol, but was later modified to include portions of the ABCD protocol in the following manner:
At the time of the MRI scan, volunteers are administered a subset of tasks from the NIH Toolbox Cognition Battery. The four tasks include:
An optional MEG study was added to the protocol approximately one year after the study was initiated, thus there are relatively fewer MEG recordings in comparison to the MRI dataset. MEG studies are performed on a 275 channel CTF MEG system (CTF MEG, Coquiltam BC, Canada). The position of the head was localized at the beginning and end of each recording using three fiducial coils. These coils were placed 1.5 cm above the nasion, and at each ear, 1.5 cm from the tragus on a line between the tragus and the outer canthus of the eye. For 48 participants (as of 2/1/2022), photographs were taken of the three coils and used to mark the points on the T1 weighted structural MRI scan for co-registration. For the remainder of the participants (n=16 as of 2/1/2022), a Brainsight neuronavigation system (Rogue Research, Montréal, Québec, Canada) was used to coregister the MRI and fiducial localizer coils in realtime prior to MEG data acquisition.
Online and In-person behavioral and clinical measures, along with the corresponding phenotype file name, sorted first by measurement location and then by file name.
Location | Measure | File Name |
---|---|---|
Online | Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT) | audit |
Demographics | demographics | |
DSM-5 Level 2 Substance Use - Adult | drug_use | |
Edinburgh Handedness Inventory (EHI) | ehi | |
Health History Form | health_history_questions | |
Perceived Health Rating - self | health_rating | |
DSM-5 |
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Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.The aims of this survey series are to ascertain : the proportion of the population who are involved in voluntary activity in the UK; the type of people most likely to volunteer; the types of activities in which volunteers are engaged; the motivations for volunteering; the benefits and drawbacks of voluntary work. The 1997 survey was carried out by BMRB International on behalf of the National Centre for Volunteering (formerly the Volunteer Centre). The need to compare trends in voluntary activity over time required that the survey was to a large extent a repeat of the previous surveys conducted by SCPR in 1981 and 1991, although some new topics were covered. A research project was carried out by the National Centre for Social Research in partnership with the Institute for Volunteering Research in 2006/7, as a follow-up to the Citizenship Survey, 2005. The resulting study, the National Survey of Volunteering and Charitable Giving, 2006-2007, is held at the UKDA under SN 5793. Main Topics: The survey covered the following subjects : working status; voluntary activity connected with work; marital status, disabilities and caring responsibilities; formal volunteering; organisation or group helped most, and most in past year (current and previous volunteers); barriers to volunteering and attitudes of irregular or former volunteers; informal volunteering; attitudes towards voluntary workers, and our society's attitudes towards them; receipt of voluntary help; donations. Users should note, a few variables on the questionnaire are not included in the dataset if they were used to create derived variables. There are many derived variables included (particularly in Section 4 of the questionnaire). Comparison of the topline and the questionnaire of the technical report is recommended for Section 4. Multi-stage stratified random sample CAPI was used. Face-to-face interview 1997 ACHIEVEMENT ADVICE AGE ASSOCIATIONS ATTITUDES BRITISH POLITICAL P... BUILDING MAINTENANCE CARE OF DEPENDANTS CARE OF THE DISABLED CARE OF THE ELDERLY CHARITABLE ORGANIZA... CHILD MINDING CHILDREN CHRONIC ILLNESS CLUBS COMMITTEES COMMUNITY ACTION COMMUNITY BEHAVIOUR COMMUNITY SERVICE P... COMMUNITY WORK COMMUTING CONSERVATIVE PARTY ... CONTEMPORARY SOCIETY COOKING COUNSELLING CRIMINAL RECORD DECISION MAKING DISABILITIES DOMESTIC RESPONSIBI... DRIVING ECONOMIC ACTIVITY EDUCATIONAL ASSOCIA... EDUCATIONAL BACKGROUND ELDERLY EMPLOYEES EMPLOYERS EMPLOYMENT HISTORY EMPLOYMENT PROGRAMMES ENVIRONMENT ENVIRONMENTAL CONSE... ETHNIC GROUPS FAITH BASED CHARITA... FAMILIES FAMILY MEMBERS FEES FINANCIAL SUPPORT FRIENDS FUND RAISING GARDENING GIFTS GROUPS HOURS OF WORK HOUSEHOLD PETS HOUSEHOLDS HOUSEWORK INCOME INDUSTRIES INSURANCE INTERVIEWING FOR JOB JOB DESCRIPTION JOB HUNTING LABOUR PARTY GREAT ... LIBERAL DEMOCRATS G... LOTTERIES MANAGERS MARITAL STATUS MASS MEDIA MEALS ON WHEELS MEMBERSHIP MOTOR VEHICLES NEIGHBOURHOODS NEIGHBOURS NEWSPAPERS OCCUPATIONS OLD AGE ORGANIZATIONS OVERTIME PARENT TEACHER ASSO... PHILANTHROPY PLACE OF RESIDENCE POLITICAL ALLEGIANCE PRESCHOOL CHILDREN PRIVATE SECTOR PROFESSIONAL ASSOCI... PUBLIC SECTOR QUALIFICATIONS QUALITY RECIDIVISM RELIGIOUS COMMUNITIES RESIDENTIAL MOBILITY RETIREMENT SATISFACTION SELF EMPLOYED SHOPPING SICK PERSONS SOCIAL PARTICIPATION SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY SOCIAL SUPPORT SOCIAL SYSTEMS SOCIAL WELFARE ORGA... SPORTS CLUBS SPOUSE S ECONOMIC A... SPOUSE S OCCUPATION SPOUSES STATE RESPONSIBILITY STUDENTS SUPERVISORS Social welfare poli... TIME TRADE UNION MEMBERSHIP TRADE UNION OFFICIALS TRADE UNIONS TRAINING TRANSPORT TRAVELLING TIME UNEMPLOYED UNEMPLOYMENT UNWAGED WORKERS VISITS PERSONAL VOLUNTARY ORGANIZAT... VOLUNTARY WELFARE O... VOLUNTARY WORK YOUTH YOUTH ORGANIZATIONS