As our understanding of Neuroimaging continues to grow, so too does the number of key research questions that need answering. Frontiers in Psychiatry are pleased to present this Research Topic to tackle some of these key questions, which pose a key challenge in the field of Neuroimaging. The Specialty Chief Editor, Professor Stefan Borgwardt, would like to invite critical, ambitious and courageous contributions that can provide new insights and stimulate a constructive debate around the topic of Neuroimaging Methods in Precision Psychiatry.There is a need of psychiatric neuroimaging to move towards more sophisticated methods including magnetic resonance imagine (MRI) and diffusion tensor imaging (DTI), task-related or resting state functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), and positron emission tomography (PET), magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS), and single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT). Moreover, neuroimaging needs to move away from measurement of structural and functional brain alterations in order to translate imaging findings into daily clinical utility including prediction, prevention, remission and treatment response. To acknowledge your efforts and commitments to shaping this discussion, the Specialty Chief Editor will select and award the best article submitted to this collection. The authors of the winning paper from the Editor's Challenge in Neuroimaging will receive a waiver for the article processing charge on their next submission to Frontiers in Psychiatry.
As our understanding of Neuroimaging continues to grow, so too does the number of key research questions that need answering. Frontiers in Psychiatry are pleased to present this Research Topic to tackle some of these key questions, which pose a key challenge in the field of Neuroimaging. The Specialty Chief Editor, Professor Stefan Borgwardt, would like to invite critical, ambitious and courageous contributions that can provide new insights and stimulate a constructive debate around the topic of Neuroimaging Methods in Precision Psychiatry.There is a need of psychiatric neuroimaging to move towards more sophisticated methods including magnetic resonance imagine (MRI) and diffusion tensor imaging (DTI), task-related or resting state functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), and positron emission tomography (PET), magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS), and single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT). Moreover, neuroimaging needs to move away from measurement of structural and functional brain alterations in order to translate imaging findings into daily clinical utility including prediction, prevention, remission and treatment response. To acknowledge your efforts and commitments to shaping this discussion, the Specialty Chief Editor will select and award the best article submitted to this collection. The authors of the winning paper from the Editor's Challenge in Neuroimaging will receive a waiver for the article processing charge on their next submission to Frontiers in Psychiatry.