• Home
  • Study Details
Open

Neuroelectric Responses to Dynamic Environments

The purpose of this study is to understand the brain's response to a standard balance test.

Age & Gender

  • 18 years ~ 35 years
  • Male, Female, Gender Inclusive

Visit Availability

  • Standard business hours (M-F, 8-5)

Location

North Carolina (Statewide)

What will be asked of you

Participation involves one 90-minute visit at the Matthew Gfeller Center. You'll complete simple questionnaires, short computer-based tests, and a balance assessment while wearing lightweight, non-invasive sensors (EEG headset, eye-tracking glasses, and a heart rate strap).

Incentives

$20

In-person visits:
1
Total length of participation:
1.5 hours

Looking for Healthy Volunteers

Requirements for healthy volunteers are different than for those with a specific condition. If you are interested in becoming a healthy volunteer for this study, use the below categories to determine if you are able to participate.

Able to participate:

  • Physically active (>150 minutes of moderate to vigorous weekly activity)

Not eligible if:

  • Cardioactive medication
  • Concussion in the last 6 months
  • History of brain surgery or traumatic brain injury
  • Neurological disorders
  • Vision corrected with glasses (not contacts)

Contact the Team

Visit Location

Contact & Visit Location

Primary Contact

Primary Visit Location

Matthew Gfeller Sport-Related Traumatic Brain Injury Research Center
Stallings Evans Sports Medicine Center (UNC-Chapel Hill)
91 Stadium Dr, Chapel Hill, NC 27515, USA

Additional Study Information

Principal Investigator

Derek Monroe
Exercise and Sport Science

Study Type

Clinical or Medical
Observational

Study Topics

Healthy Volunteer or General Population

IRB Number

25-2069

Research for Me logo

Copyright © 2013-2022 The NC TraCS Institute, the integrated home of the NIH Clinical and Translational Science Awards (CTSA) Program at UNC-CH.  This website is made possible by CTSA Grant UL1TR002489 and the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences.

Questions?

  • This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
logo for the North Carolina Translational and Clinical Sciences Institute
logo for UNC Health
logo for UNC School of Medicine
logo for UNC Research