Header Logo

Search Result Details

This page shows the details of why an item matched the keywords from your search.
One or more keywords matched the following properties of Lamar, Melissa
PropertyValue
overview Melissa Lamar, Ph.D. is an Associate Professor in the Department of Behavioral Sciences and Rush University Medical Center, and a Clinical Neuropsychologist in the Rush Alzheimer’s Disease Center. She received her Ph.D. 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 cardiovascular disease risk factors, brain aging and cognition with a particular focus on Latinos and African Americans. Dr. Lamar employs novel neuroimaging and data analytic techniques to identify modifiable factors associated with health disparities in brain aging. Additionally, she incorporates translational tasks and digital technology into her work assessing cognitive functioning in order to strengthen the accuracy of her work. Together with the Boston Process Approach to Neuropsychology, Dr. Lamar is able to detect subtle alterations in behavior and pin-point their roots in brain. Dr. Lamar has published extensively on brain-behavior profiles of risk and disease in aging and has received numerous honors and awards for her work including Fellows status of the American Psychological Association and the 2017 Arthur Benton Award for Mid-Career Research from the International Neuropsychological Society. My Scopus ID is 6701739395.
One or more keywords matched the following items that are connected to Lamar, Melissa
Item TypeName
Concept Neuroimaging
Academic Article MRI-leukoaraiosis thresholds and the phenotypic expression of dementia.
Academic Article Graph theory analysis of cortical-subcortical networks in late-life depression.
Academic Article In vivo quantification of white matter microstructure for use in aging: a focus on two emerging techniques.
Academic Article Association of brain network efficiency with aging, depression, and cognition.
Academic Article White matter microstructure in brain aging: human and animal models.
Academic Article Associations of the Mediterranean diet with cognitive and neuroimaging phenotypes of dementia in healthy older adults.
Academic Article White matter correlates of scam susceptibility in community-dwelling older adults.
Academic Article SERIAL-ORDER recall in working memory across the cognitive spectrum of Parkinson's disease and neuroimaging correlates.
Academic Article Self-reported experiences of discrimination in older black adults are associated with insula functional connectivity.
Academic Article Decreased myelin content of the fornix predicts poorer memory performance beyond vascular risk, hippocampal volume, and fractional anisotropy in nondemented older adults.
Academic Article Bootstrap approach for meta-synthesis of MRI findings from multiple scanners.
Academic Article Inflammatory markers and tract-based structural connectomics in older adults with a preliminary exploration of associations by race.
Academic Article Prevalence of incidental brain MRI findings of clinical relevance in a diverse Hispanic/Latino population.
Academic Article Cognitive decline and hippocampal functional connectivity within older Black adults.
Academic Article Measurement precision across cognitive domains in the Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI) data set.
Academic Article Quantification of race/ethnicity representation in Alzheimer's disease neuroimaging research in the USA: a systematic review.
Search Criteria
  • Neuroimaging