Metadata
Title
News from Brown
Category
undergraduate
UUID
2870d969e6f645a1a5a84c74e6daa171
Source URL
https://www.brown.edu/news/2026-02-06/ocd-brain
Parent URL
https://www.brown.edu/news
Crawl Time
2026-03-16T05:00:07+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

News from Brown

Source: https://www.brown.edu/news/2026-02-06/ocd-brain Parent: https://www.brown.edu/news

Topics

Health and Medicine

Date

February 6, 2026 2026-02-06

Media Contact

Corrie Pikul\ [email protected]\ 401-863-1862

All News

Share

Facebook Twitter_X Linkedin Email

Study reveals insights about brain regions linked to OCD, informing potential treatments

By

Gretchen Schrafft, Science Communications Specialist, Robert J. and Nancy D. Carney Institute for Brain Science

Researchers found differences in how brain regions work together during certain cognitive tasks, which may help clinicians more effectively treat and assess obsessive-compulsive disorder.

Associate Professor of Brain Science Theresa Desrochers conducts studies (including this one) in the Brown University MRI Research Facility. Photo by Gretchen Schrafft.

PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] — A new study revealed that certain brain regions are more active in people with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) during cognitively demanding tasks. The findings could help inform new ways in which the condition is treated and assessed.

The study, published in Imaging Neuroscience, was conductedby researchers in the laboratory of Theresa Desrochers, an associate professor of brain science and of psychiatry and human behavior at Brown University’s Carney Institute for Brain Science.

Desrochers studies abstract sequential behavior, which is behavior — such as getting dressed in the morning — that follows a general sequence even though individual steps may vary. For the study, the team examined potential links between abstract sequencing and OCD, a prevalent psychiatric disorder characterized by repetitive thoughts and associated compulsive actions that cause distress for the diagnosed person.

“We started looking into OCD because symptoms of the condition suggest that patients lose track or get stuck where they are while performing sequences,” said lead study authorHannah Doyle a postdoctoral research associate in Desrochers’ lab.

For the study, researchers asked participants to perform a sequential cognitive task while in a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scanner, naming the color or shape of an object in a specific order. Doyle found that while individuals with OCD were able to perform the sequence as well as the control group (people who were not diagnosed with OCD), the MRI scans revealed differences in brain regions connected to motor and cognitive task control, working memory and object recognition.

“Their behavior looked similar, but the brains of the participants with OCD recruited more brain regions than the people in the control group,” Doyle said.

She noted that some of the regions hadn’t previously been linked to OCD. Those regions include the middle temporal gyrus — involved in working memory, semantic memory retrieval and language processing — and an area spanning part of the occipital gyrus and the temporo-occipital junction, which is involved in lower-level visual stimulus processing and object recognition.

Study co-author Nicole McLaughlin, an associate professor of psychiatry and human behavior at Brown and a neuropsychologist at Butler Hospital, said the findings may lead to new treatment targets for OCD, especially when involving transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS). TMS is a therapy that uses magnetic pulses to stimulate brain regions implicated in a psychiatric disorder. The procedure was approved as a treatment for OCD by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in 2018; research has shown TMS leads to improvement in about 30-40% of OCD patients.

Hannah Doyle: Studying brains in the lab and showing brawn in the ring

The Brown postdoctoral research associate and competitive boxer researches how the brain processes combinations — like the ones she practices at the gym — to better understand cognitive disorders.

Read more

According to McLaughlin, the treatment might be even more effective if the newly implicated regions are targeted: “If we reposition coils during TMS treatments to be near these brain regions, we might end up seeing a greater improvement in symptoms,” she said.

The real-life relevance of the cognitive task used in the study was key to the team’s insights.

“A lot of tasks that are used in a clinical setting are static,” said Desrochers. “But as humans, we interact with the world through sequences, where we organize information and make decisions. So we're asking people to do a task where these different control systems have to interact.”

The sequencing task calls for participants to name the colors or shapes of a series of images in a particular order, such as color, color, shape, shape, requiring the ability to keep track of a sequence while making a categorization decision.

“This task gets us closer to understanding what actually looks different in the brain for folks with OCD when all of these different cognitive control systems are trying to work together,” Desrochers said.

The researchers are testing the possibility of using the sequence task itself as an assessment tool.

“We are planning to use the task between treatments,” McLaughlin said. “If we start to see OCD patients’ brains looking more like control participants when they perform the task, that could help indicate that TMS treatment may be effective for symptom reduction.”

The research was funded by the National Institute of Mental Health (R01MH131615) and the National Institute of General Medical Sciences (P20GM130452).

Tags

Carney Institute Research

Health and Medicine

White House autism briefing linked to swift shifts in prescribing patterns, study finds

March 5, 2026

A new study showed a significant decrease in acetaminophen use during pregnancy and a surge in leucovorin prescriptions after a September 2025 announcement that included comments by the president and head of the FDA.

Read Article

Open details for White House autism briefing linked to swift shifts in prescribing patterns, study finds

Health and Medicine

Growth in telemedicine has not improved mental health care access in rural areas, study finds

March 5, 2026

While telemedicine provides convenience for patients who move to areas far from their providers, researchers found it does not substantially improve care access for those in rural or underserved areas.

Read Article

Open details for Growth in telemedicine has not improved mental health care access in rural areas, study finds

Health and Medicine

With federal award of up to $22 million, researchers to study treatment to slow the human aging process

February 24, 2026

Researchers from Brown University and the University of Rochester will lead a multi-institution project to test whether reducing DNA-triggered inflammation can help older adults stay healthier for longer.

Read Article

Open details for With federal award of up to $22 million, researchers to study treatment to slow the human aging process