R01MH127408
Project Grant
Overview
Grant Description
A prospective longitudinal study of transactional associations between social, neural, and hormonal changes and adolescent girls' mental health trajectories - Abstract
Internalizing problems are common, harmful, and sharply increasing amongst adolescent girls – creating a public health imperative to identify mechanisms as well as markers of risk or resilience, spanning from biology to behavior. It is also essential to identify for whom these issues will be adolescent-limited versus indicative of persistent or worsening mental health, and understand the reasons why.
Core biological and social processes of adolescence, such as puberty, brain development, and peer relationships, are promising targets. Socially, building and strengthening close friendships and romantic relationships are central developmental tasks in mid-to-late adolescence. The quality of close peer relationships in mid-to-late adolescent girls is known to have bidirectional and nuanced associations with emergence and recurrence of depression, anxiety, and self-harm.
Interrogating this dual nature of close relationships, across timescales from days to years, is critical to begin addressing the emerging mental health crisis in adolescent girls. Furthermore, it is necessary to also account for the extended influence of pubertal processes, as puberty itself is strongly implicated in adolescent girls’ mental health. Ongoing maturation of sex hormones as well as brain structure, function, and connectivity through late adolescence makes it vital to integrate the contribution of developmental change in these biological factors to social processes and internalizing problems.
The Transitions in Adolescent Girls (TAG) study, launched in 2015 (R01/R56 MH107418), was designed as a comprehensive multilevel investigation of the connections between biological and social changes during early-to-mid adolescence, as mechanisms of risk for the emergence of depression, anxiety, and self-harm. We enrolled a community sample of N=174 girls (initial ages 10-13 years) into a longitudinal study, with three waves of data collected every 18 months, including two laboratory visits at each wave.
The first phase of the TAG study focused on early-to-mid adolescent mental health, as shaped by pubertal, neural, and social development (self-perception and social cognition). We propose to collect three additional waves of data, approximately 18 months apart, extending the cohort’s age range to 21 years. This new phase of the TAG study will have a developmentally-appropriate multilevel emphasis on close peer relationships, assessed via established questionnaires, daily self-reports, and novel paradigms that tap into intimate self-disclosure behavior and brain function.
It will conduct innovative analyses to relate daily positive and negative experiences in close friendships and romantic relationships, with changes in well-being. Finally, it will continue to deeply phenotype ongoing biological (neural, hormonal, and pubertal) changes, and relate these to antecedent and subsequent social processes and mental health.
We propose that close relationship quality and neurodevelopment during mid-to-late adolescence is not only predictive of concurrent and near-future mental health, but also part of a cascading series of developmental and risk processes that are set into motion by earlier biological and psychosocial changes.
Internalizing problems are common, harmful, and sharply increasing amongst adolescent girls – creating a public health imperative to identify mechanisms as well as markers of risk or resilience, spanning from biology to behavior. It is also essential to identify for whom these issues will be adolescent-limited versus indicative of persistent or worsening mental health, and understand the reasons why.
Core biological and social processes of adolescence, such as puberty, brain development, and peer relationships, are promising targets. Socially, building and strengthening close friendships and romantic relationships are central developmental tasks in mid-to-late adolescence. The quality of close peer relationships in mid-to-late adolescent girls is known to have bidirectional and nuanced associations with emergence and recurrence of depression, anxiety, and self-harm.
Interrogating this dual nature of close relationships, across timescales from days to years, is critical to begin addressing the emerging mental health crisis in adolescent girls. Furthermore, it is necessary to also account for the extended influence of pubertal processes, as puberty itself is strongly implicated in adolescent girls’ mental health. Ongoing maturation of sex hormones as well as brain structure, function, and connectivity through late adolescence makes it vital to integrate the contribution of developmental change in these biological factors to social processes and internalizing problems.
The Transitions in Adolescent Girls (TAG) study, launched in 2015 (R01/R56 MH107418), was designed as a comprehensive multilevel investigation of the connections between biological and social changes during early-to-mid adolescence, as mechanisms of risk for the emergence of depression, anxiety, and self-harm. We enrolled a community sample of N=174 girls (initial ages 10-13 years) into a longitudinal study, with three waves of data collected every 18 months, including two laboratory visits at each wave.
The first phase of the TAG study focused on early-to-mid adolescent mental health, as shaped by pubertal, neural, and social development (self-perception and social cognition). We propose to collect three additional waves of data, approximately 18 months apart, extending the cohort’s age range to 21 years. This new phase of the TAG study will have a developmentally-appropriate multilevel emphasis on close peer relationships, assessed via established questionnaires, daily self-reports, and novel paradigms that tap into intimate self-disclosure behavior and brain function.
It will conduct innovative analyses to relate daily positive and negative experiences in close friendships and romantic relationships, with changes in well-being. Finally, it will continue to deeply phenotype ongoing biological (neural, hormonal, and pubertal) changes, and relate these to antecedent and subsequent social processes and mental health.
We propose that close relationship quality and neurodevelopment during mid-to-late adolescence is not only predictive of concurrent and near-future mental health, but also part of a cascading series of developmental and risk processes that are set into motion by earlier biological and psychosocial changes.
Awardee
Funding Goals
THE MISSION OF THE NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF MENTAL HEALTH (NIMH) IS TO TRANSFORM THE UNDERSTANDING AND TREATMENT OF MENTAL ILLNESSES THROUGH BASIC AND CLINICAL RESEARCH, PAVING THE WAY FOR PREVENTION, RECOVERY, AND CURE. WE FULFILL THIS MISSION BY SUPPORTING AND CONDUCTING RESEARCH ON MENTAL ILLNESSES, HEALTH SERVICES, AND THE UNDERLYING BASIC SCIENCE OF THE BRAIN AND BEHAVIOR; SUPPORTING THE TRAINING OF SCIENTISTS TO CARRY OUT BASIC AND CLINICAL MENTAL HEALTH RESEARCH; AND COMMUNICATING WITH SCIENTISTS, PATIENTS, PROVIDERS, AND THE PUBLIC ABOUT MENTAL HEALTH RESEARCH ADVANCES AND PRIORITIES. IN MAY 2024, NIMH RELEASED ITS STRATEGIC PLAN FOR RESEARCH. THE STRATEGIC PLAN BUILDS ON THE SUCCESSES OF PREVIOUS NIMH STRATEGIC PLANS BY PROVIDING A FRAMEWORK FOR SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH AND EXPLORATION, AND ADDRESSING NEW CHALLENGES IN MENTAL HEALTH.THE NEW STRATEGIC PLAN OUTLINES FOUR HIGH-LEVEL GOALS: GOAL 1: DEFINE THE BRAIN MECHANISMS UNDERLYING COMPLEX BEHAVIORS GOAL 2: EXAMINE MENTAL ILLNESS TRAJECTORIES ACROSS THE LIFESPAN GOAL 3: STRIVE FOR PREVENTION AND CURES GOAL 4: STRENGTHEN THE PUBLIC HEALTH IMPACT OF NIMH-SUPPORTED RESEARCH THESE FOUR GOALS FORM A BROAD ROADMAP FOR THE INSTITUTES RESEARCH PRIORITIES OVER THE NEXT FIVE YEARS, BEGINNING WITH THE FUNDAMENTAL SCIENCE OF THE BRAIN AND BEHAVIOR, AND EXTENDING THROUGH EVIDENCE-BASED SERVICES THAT IMPROVE PUBLIC HEALTH OUTCOMES.
Grant Program (CFDA)
Awarding / Funding Agency
Place of Performance
Eugene,
Oregon
974035295
United States
Geographic Scope
Single Zip Code
Related Opportunity
Analysis Notes
Amendment Since initial award the total obligations have increased 390% from $718,380 to $3,523,384.
University Of Oregon was awarded
TAG Study: Adolescent Girls' Mental Health Trajectories
Project Grant R01MH127408
worth $3,523,384
from the National Institute of Mental Health in May 2022 with work to be completed primarily in Eugene Oregon United States.
The grant
has a duration of 4 years 10 months and
was awarded through assistance program 93.242 Mental Health Research Grants.
The Project Grant was awarded through grant opportunity NIH Research Project Grant (Parent R01 Clinical Trial Not Allowed).
Status
(Ongoing)
Last Modified 4/6/26
Period of Performance
5/12/22
Start Date
3/31/27
End Date
Funding Split
$3.5M
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$3.5M
Total Obligated
Activity Timeline
Transaction History
Modifications to R01MH127408
Additional Detail
Award ID FAIN
R01MH127408
SAI Number
R01MH127408-91048476
Award ID URI
SAI UNAVAILABLE
Awardee Classifications
Public/State Controlled Institution Of Higher Education
Awarding Office
75N700 NIH National Institute of Mental Health
Funding Office
75N700 NIH National Institute of Mental Health
Awardee UEI
Z3FGN9MF92U2
Awardee CAGE
1L2V1
Performance District
OR-04
Senators
Jeff Merkley
Ron Wyden
Ron Wyden
Budget Funding
| Federal Account | Budget Subfunction | Object Class | Total | Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| National Institute of Mental Health, National Institutes of Health, Health and Human Services (075-0892) | Health research and training | Grants, subsidies, and contributions (41.0) | $1,455,025 | 100% |
Modified: 4/6/26