a Seminar

Friday, 10/25/2024 to 10/25/2024, 12:00 pm.   ARCHIVED EVENT

CAPS Texas Center on Aging and Population SciencesPresenter: Melissa Lamar, Clinical Neuropsychologist, Rush Alzheimer’s Disease Center

Lunch (Cabo Bob’s) at 11:30 a.m.
Seminar will start at 12 p.m.
In-person in RLP 1.302E
And via Zoom https://utexas.zoom.us/j/95565978641

Abstract:

  1. Describe how several traditional risk factors for cognitive decline and Alzheimer’s dementia in non-Latino Whites do not manifest the same level of risk in Latinos.
  2. Define newer theories of acculturation, particularly, acculturation in context as a framework for investigating brain aging in older Latinos.
  3. Discuss the literature surrounding acculturation in context and cognitive and brain aging in Latinos

Bio: Melissa Lamar, PhD, is a Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Rush University Medical Center, and a Clinical Neuropsychologist within the Rush Alzheimer’s Disease Center. She received her PhD in Clinical Neuropsychology from Drexel University and completed her postdoctoral training in Cognitive Neuroscience within the Intramural program of the Laboratory of Behavioral Neurosciences at the National Institute on Aging. She worked at the Institute of Psychiatry King’s College London and the University of Illinois at Chicago prior to joining the Rush faculty in 2016. Her research focuses on modifiable risk and resilience factors as they relate to cognitive and brain aging in older Latino and Black/African American adults. Dr. Lamar employs novel geospatial and neuroimaging approaches and incorporates digital technology into her work with the overarching goal of reducing health disparities and increasing health equity. Dr. Lamar has published extensively, is the PI of several NIH grants, and has received numerous honors and awards for her work including Fellows status of the American Psychological Association and the Arthur Benton Award for Mid-Career Research from the International Neuropsychological Society.