Personalized cognitive profiles to guide depression care

ACE-D: Accelerating Cognition-guided signatures to Enhance translation in Depression

NIH-funded research Stanford University · NIH-11285458

Using short computer tasks and a smartphone app to create individualized thinking profiles for adults with depression so treatment can better match their needs.

Quick facts

Grant typeNIH-funded research
Study typeNIH-funded research
Funding institutionStanford University NIH-funded
Lab location1 site (Stanford, United States)
Project IDNIH-11285458 on NIH RePORTER

What this research studies

You would complete brief computerized thinking tasks (WebNeuro) and allow a smartphone app (BiAffect) to passively collect everyday behavior to measure cognitive function. The team will refine a cognitive "signature" using existing multi-site data from over 3,000 people, including those who received medication or therapy and healthy comparison participants. They will test whether this signature predicts who improves after treatment and can reliably track recovery for individual patients. If successful, the tool would be deployed for clinicians to use in routine care to help inform prognosis and treatment choices.

Who could benefit from this research

Good fit: Adults aged 21 or older with current or recent major depressive disorder who can use a smartphone and complete brief online cognitive tasks are the ideal candidates.

Not a fit: People under 21, those without smartphone or internet access, or individuals whose symptoms are unrelated to depression may not benefit from this tool.

Why it matters

Potential benefit: Could provide an objective, personalized measure of cognitive problems to help clinicians choose and time treatments for people with depression.

How similar studies have performed: Previous research has identified cognitive patterns in depression and the team has pilot data supporting this approach, but integrating large multi-site cognitive data with passive smartphone measures at scale is relatively new.

Where this research is happening

Stanford, United States

Researchers

About this research

  1. This is an active NIH-funded research project — typically early-stage science, not a clinical trial accepting patient enrollment.
  2. Some NIH-funded labs run parallel clinical studies or seek volunteers for related work. To check, contact the principal investigator or institution listed above.
  3. For full project details, budget, and progress reports, visit the official NIH RePORTER page below.
Last reviewed 2026-06-13 by the Find a Trial editorial team. Information on this page is for educational purposes and is not medical advice. Always consult qualified healthcare professionals about clinical trial participation.