Total Brain International Database

The first standardized, integrative human brain database — spanning genetics, imaging, psychophysiology, cognition, and self-report across clinical and normative populations worldwide.

Download the Total Brain AI and AGI Position Paper

To see other publications that use the Total Brain Database and its standardized assessment methods, click here.

For research partnerships & database licensing: evian.gordon@totalbrain.com

The Total Brain — integrative continuum of brain-body functioning
507,744 Individuals
631,077 Test Sessions
7 Billion+ Data Points
14 Subject Group Types
5 Countries
337+ Peer-Reviewed Publications

1. Database Unique Attributes

Depth and breadth of data provide a matrix of possibilities for new drug targets, clinical diagnostics, clinical subtypes, and genetics–biological–cognition interconnections.

Scale & Scope

Over 500,000 test sessions with over 4 billion data points, spanning 14 subject group types. Ideal for AI analysis.

Standardized Methodology

Standardized data collection allows pooling of data for analysis between studies and datasets — including seamless comparison of clinical and normative cohorts.

Integrative Continuum

Data types and paradigms designed to capture the full spectrum of brain processes, from non-conscious through to conscious and long-term self-regulation, for both cognitive and emotional functioning.

Global Sources

Majority from the US, with substantial contributions from Europe and Australia. Collected across 18 international testing sites.

Integrative Continuum of Brain-Body Functioning

The assessments and data metrics in the Total Brain International Database have been designed to capture the core processing elements along the spectrum of brain processes, following a continuum from non-conscious through to conscious and long-term self-regulation processes. The metrics provide an integrative framework both across this continuum and across levels of function (genetic, imaging, functional brain-body dynamics, cognitive performance, and self-report).

Individual variation in the way these systems operate and interact with each other can be mediated by many factors — including maturation, aging, and genetics. These factors play an ongoing role in brain plasticity as it continues to change and adapt over time. Only in a large and broad database can individual variation and related mediating factors be fully elucidated and accounted for.

The database has also been designed to capture the continuum from mental and cognitive wellness through to vulnerability and disorder. All assessments are standardized and identical between normative and clinical groups, meaning that data can be seamlessly pooled together for combined analysis across all cohort groups and data sources.

2. Wellness, Stress and Resilience

The unprecedented breadth of integrative data in this large normative cohort makes it a powerful source for modelling patterns of genetic–biological–cognition interconnections, and the complex pathways and mechanisms of action that they give rise to.

This data set is particularly well positioned for explorations of emotional functioning and wellbeing, the interplay of stress and resilience within these systems, and how genes and gene–environment effects interact with these systems to influence current cognitive and emotional functioning.

Example Applications

1. Gene–Environment Interaction Pathways to Mental Health. Path analysis modelling with part of this dataset has elucidated how genetic BDNF variants interact with experienced childhood trauma such that childhood trauma leads to adult Anxiety via amygdala-MPFC emotional brain networks, and to both Anxiety and Depression in met allele carriers via Cognitive Hippocampal-LPFC brain networks.

Gene-Brain Path Analysis — BDNF genetics, brain, arousal, symptoms, and cognition pathway diagram
Figure: Gene–brain path analysis showing how BDNF genetic variants interact with early life stress to produce differential outcomes via hippocampal-LPFC (cognition) and amygdala-MPFC (emotion) networks. Molecular Psychiatry, 2009.

2. Stress and Resilience. Stress is related to a wide variety of metrics in the database, including Sleep, Exercise, Heart Rate Variability, Nutrition, and Social Connectedness. The database includes not only self-report measures of Resilience, but many of the underlying factors — biological stress-recovery metrics, cognitive flexibility, objective metrics of emotional response and regulation (at conscious and subconscious levels), positivity bias, and social support.

STRESS: Bidirectional Impact on Sleep, Social Connection, Nutrition, Exercise
Figure: Stress and its bidirectional relationship with sleep quality, social connectedness, nutrition, and exercise frequency — illustrated with data from the Total Brain normative database.

3. Lifespan Stages in Emotional Functioning. Adolescence and early adulthood are characterized by low response to threat but high automatic responses to social signals of approval and reward. Older adults show a much greater prolonged response to signals of threat or fear. Genetics also influences age-related changes in emotional functioning across the lifespan.

Markers Across Age — Self-Regulation, Feeling, Thinking, EEG, and MRI changes from youth to old age
Figure: Markers across age — the Total Brain Database captures lifespan trajectories across Self-Regulation, Emotional functioning, Cognitive performance, EEG brain dynamics (alpha peak frequency), and MRI gray matter. EEG alpha peak frequency is fastest in adolescence/young adulthood; cortical gray matter is progressively lost with age while subcortical gray matter is preserved.

3. Anxiety and Depression

Anxiety and Depression are independent conditions, but are also linked in complex ways that are not well understood. The datasets within the Total Brain International Database capture the full span of this continuum from vulnerability through to subclinical symptomology and clinical disorder:

iSPOT-D Depression Trial. iSPOT-D (International Study To Predict Optimized Treatment in Depression) was a $16M clinical trial to identify objective predictors of treatment response after 8 weeks to three of the most commonly used antidepressants: Escitalopram (Lexapro), Sertraline (Zoloft), and Venlafaxine-XR (Effexor). N = 1,008 MDD patients were acquired in the experimental group and N = 704 in the replication group, across 18 testing sites in 5 countries. See the iSPOT Trials tab for full details.

There are several cohorts of diagnosed clinical groups with a total N = 2,650, all with the same Psychophysiology, Cognition, and Questionnaire data: N = 1,712 Major Depressive Disorder patients from the iSPOT-D trial; N = 646 Depressive Disorder patients; N = 124 Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD) patients; N = 56 Panic Disorder patients; N = 112 Post-traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) patients.

There is also a very large clinical cohort of over N = 31,000 from counseling, psychology, psychiatry, or neurofeedback clinics. This dataset is ideal for analyses aligned with the NIMH RDoC research framework, which promotes the utility of using mixed, diagnosis-independent samples to identify underlying substrates of the depression-anxiety spectrum of emotional dysregulation mood disorders.

4. Cognition

4.1 Normative Cognition Database

The Total Brain Normative Cognition Database is unique in providing global insights into cognitive functioning. The set of cognitive tests is designed to capture a progressive hierarchy of cognitive skills — starting with basic speed and decision responses, building in turn to attention and focus, memory span, cognitive control and inhibition, cognitive flexibility, emotional awareness, and complex executive function.

The expansive normative cohort of over N = 400,000 provides cognitive performance data with both raw scores and normative z-scores, STEN scores, and percentile scores relative to age and gender. Highly detailed log files of individual responses to each stimulus throughout each task are also available.

Total Brain Cognition Database — Unique Global Insights into Cognitive Functioning
Figure: Progressive hierarchy of cognitive capacities and three-tier data depth — summary scores, detailed accuracy/speed metrics per task, and individual stimulus-level log files — across integrative combinations of cognition, emotional functioning, brain activity, and genetics.

4.2 Healthy Aging, Mild Cognitive Impairment, and Dementia

The Total Brain Database contains cohorts from each of the SMC (Subjective Memory Complaint), MCI (Mild Cognitive Impairment), and Dementia stages, with progression tracked within the same individuals over time — a total of N = 277 with 636 testing sessions — in addition to the comparative database of healthy aging.

Progressive Stages of Cognitive Decline — SMC, MCI, and Dementia cohorts
Figure: The three longitudinal cohorts across progressive stages of cognitive decline — Subjective Memory Complaint (N=73), Mild Cognitive Impairment (N=118, tracked over 2–3 years), and Alzheimer's Dementia (N=36) — each with cognition and EEG data.

4.3 Traumatic Brain Injury

The Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) group contains N = 343, with cognition and psychophysiology assessments, including resting EEG as well as EEG during several cognitive tasks. This cohort provides an unprecedented opportunity to compare common and unique elements of cognitive performance and underlying neural substrates between TBI, SMC, and MCI populations — all tested on the same standardized batteries.

5. Child and Adolescent Mental Health and Cognition

5.1 ADHD

There is a cohort of N = 851 children and adolescents with ADHD collected as part of two comprehensive studies of Clinical-Cognition-EEG assessment before and after 6 weeks of stimulant treatment (n = 499 from iSPOT-A Trial; n = 352 from BRAINnet ADHD Study). This dataset is best for:

There are also N = 23,870 ADHD-focused clinic patients with cognitive data, providing one of the world's largest ADHD real-world datasets.

5.2 Child and Adolescent Emotional, Behavioral, and Learning Disorders

The database contains N = 21,441 from clinics treating emotional, behavioral, and learning disorders, including Conduct Disorder (N = 44), Conversion Disorder (N = 56), Anorexia (N = 42), and other diagnostic groups.

6. Neurological and Other Clinical Cohorts

Beyond depression, anxiety, cognition, and ADHD, the database includes:

Database Summary: Who Is in the Database

The table below is drawn from Appendix B1 of the Total Brain International Database documentation and shows the full breakdown of all subject groups, test sessions, data points, and available data modalities.

Subject Group People Test Sessions Data Points w/ DASS w/ Cognition / Q w/ Psychophys. w/ Genetics w/ Imaging
TOTAL 507,744 631,077 6,998,611,824 262,081 622,808 35,602 4,003 760
NORMATIVE
Normative Total 400,442 491,265 1,744,530,151 200,504 491,003 5,490 2,255 599
Core Normative Dataset 4,111 4,661 916,638,174 3,305 4,399 4,328 1,743 438
iSPOT-A and iSPOT-D Trial Controls 631 3,790 296,652,200 1,135 3,790 1,162 512 161
Employee and Consumer User Groups 395,700 482,814 531,239,777 196,064 482,814
CLINICAL
Clinical Total 107,302 139,812 5,254,081,673 63,498 137,502 30,865 2,130 290
Depression
Depression Total 2,358 11,854 1,785,430,274 3,296 11,838 3,576 1,507 226
Major Depressive Disorder (iSPOT-D Trial) 1,712 11,150 1,666,489,348 2,876 11,150 2,893 1,507 226
Major Depressive Disorder (BRAINnet Study) 138 172 40,621,421 110 172 159
Clinical Patients with Depressive Disorder 508 532 78,319,505 310 516 524
Anxiety
Anxiety Total 292 319 54,820,131 213 315 306 17
Generalized Anxiety Disorder 124 126 29,548,160 80 123 124
Panic Disorder 56 56 7,686,280 55 56 53
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) 112 137 17,585,691 78 136 129 17
Mixed Clinical Mental Health
Adult Mixed Mental Health Dataset (diagnosis not known) 31,358 35,939 2,320,399,633 18,681 34,423 11,578
Age-Related Cognitive Decline and Dementia
SMC, MCI, Alzheimer's Dementia Total 227 636 52,362,193 166 630 600
Subjective Memory Complaint (SMC) 73 128 6,003,878 73 128 119
Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) – 3-year progression study 118 470 39,609,171 75 464 447
Alzheimer's Dementia 36 38 6,749,144 18 38 34
ADHD (6–18 years)
ADHD Total 26,314 30,599 679,701,767 7,576 30,084 3,042 546 39
iSPOT-A Trial ADHD Patients 499 928 217,247,727 892 928 911 474 39
BRAINnet ADHD Study 352 506 76,260,370 296 425 487 72
ADHD Clinic Patients (with confirmed diagnosis) 1,593 1,684 295,220,046 906 1,250 1,644
ADHD Clinic Patients (diagnosis not confirmed) 23,870 27,481 90,973,624 5,482 27,481
Child & Adolescent Emotional, Behavioral, and Learning Disorders
Total 21,441 24,566 97,415,370 6,641 24,566 177
Conduct Disorder 44 46 3,816,814 38 46 42
Conversion Disorder 56 66 10,605,633 43 66 65
Anorexia 42 72 9,205,329 37 72 70
Psychosis Disorders
Psychosis Disorders Total 160 202 61,548,404 25 202 191 25
First Onset Schizophrenia 140 181 57,350,368 12 181 172 25
Substance Abuse
Patients from Addiction Recovery Clinics 10,339 17,573 41,688,695 16,930 17,573
Neurological & Other Clinical
Neurological & Other Total 14,813 18,124 160,715,206 9,970 17,871 1,056 60
Sleep Disorder 444 612 23,113,452 188 611 178 60
Traumatic Brain Injury 343 368 42,645,626 205 243 365
Neurology Clinics 7,095 9,520 27,377,668 6,586 9,520
Learning Disorders in Adults 365 517 1,335,514 72 517

Database Partnerships & Licensing

For research partnerships & database licensing: evian.gordon@totalbrain.com