The Cambridge Centre for Ageing and Neuroscience (Cam-CAN) uses epidemiological, behavioral, and neuroimaging data to understand how individuals can best retain cognitive abilities into old age. The Cam-CAN Data Access Portal provides access to datasets from the Cambridge Centre for Ageing and Neuroscience, including neuroimaging and cognitive data from participants aged 18-90.
Cam-CAN is a research project at the University of Cambridge focused on understanding cognitive decline and healthy ageing. It aims to improve our understanding of how people can maintain cognitive abilities as they age. The portal offers a range of data from the Cam-CAN project, including MRI and MEG scans, cognitive assessments, and demographic information. Researchers can apply for access to these freely available datasets to study cognitive ageing.
This dataset contains 20,000 labelled English tweets of depressed and non-depressed users. The data is collected using the Twitter API and includes feature extraction techniques such as topic modelling and emoji sentiment analysis. It is designed for mental health classification at the tweet level.
The CaiTI_dataset repository contains datasets for Motivational Interviewing and Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, curated by therapists to train CaiTI.
The Lothian Diary Project consists of 125+ audio/video recordings collected from residents of Edinburgh and the Lothian counties in Scotland. Participants discuss their experiences during different stages of the Covid-19 pandemic. The recordings are accompanied by transcriptions and demographic information.