Plain-English translation of NCT06045897 on ClinicalTrials.gov ↗ · Source last updated · Translation generated · How we translate trials
This study doesn't follow the usual testing phases — it may be an observational study or a different type of research.
This research uses a non-invasive brain imaging technique called EEG (electroencephalography) to record your brain's electrical activity while you rest and sleep. Researchers want to understand whether specific brain wave patterns could help identify and better understand mental health conditions like schizophrenia, depression, psychosis, and autism. By comparing brain patterns across different groups of people, they hope to find new ways to recognize these conditions earlier.
Currently, mental health conditions are diagnosed mainly through interviews and symptom observation, which can sometimes be subjective or delayed. This study aims to discover whether objective brain wave patterns could serve as biological markers—like a fingerprint—to help doctors identify these conditions more reliably and potentially catch them at earlier stages when treatment might be more effective.
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If you join this study, you would come in for a visit where researchers place a cap with 64 small sensors on your head to record your brain's electrical activity. You'll have a 5-minute recording while you sit quietly with your eyes closed, and possibly during sleep. The sensors simply read your brain's natural activity—there's no electricity or stimulation involved. The whole process is painless and non-invasive, similar to getting an EEG in a hospital setting.
AI-generated summary from trial data · Jun 2, 2026 · Not medical advice
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