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One or more keywords matched the following properties of Lamar, Melissa
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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 Research Design
Award or Honor Receipt Arthur Benton Award for Mid-Career Research
Award or Honor Receipt Affiliated Faculty, Institute for Minority Research
Award or Honor Receipt Research Associate, Building Interdisciplinary Careers in Women's Health Career Development Programs
Award or Honor Receipt Scholar, Advanced Research Institute in Geriatric Psychiatry
Award or Honor Receipt Travel Scholarship
Award or Honor Receipt Travel Scholarship
Award or Honor Receipt Fellow
Award or Honor Receipt Honorary Research Scientist, Department of Cardiac & Vascular Sciences'
Award or Honor Receipt Scientific Director's Award in Research
Award or Honor Receipt Graduate Student Research Award
Academic Article Building research in diet and cognition: The BRIDGE randomized controlled trial.
Academic Article Relationship of Early-Life Residence and Educational Experience to Level and Change in Cognitive Functioning: Results of the Minority Aging Research Study.
Academic Article MarkVCID cerebral small vessel consortium: I. Enrollment, clinical, fluid protocols.
Academic Article Building research in diet and cognition (BRIDGE): Baseline characteristics of older obese African American adults in a randomized controlled trial to examine the effect of the Mediterranean diet with and without weight loss on cognitive functioning.
Academic Article Adapting to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on a randomized controlled trial examining lifestyle behaviors on cognitive functioning in obese African American adults: Building Research in Diet and Cognition (BRIDGE).
Academic Article Bootstrap approach for meta-synthesis of MRI findings from multiple scanners.
Academic Article Adapting to the COVID-19 pandemic on Building Research in Diet and Cognition (BRIDGE) trial.
Academic Article Acute versus chronic inflammatory markers and cognition in older black adults: Results from the Minority Aging Research Study.
Academic Article The Boston Process Approach and Digital Neuropsychological Assessment: Past Research and Future Directions.
Academic Article Stability and change in acculturation-related characteristics in older Latinos: Implications for culturally compatible ADRD research.
Academic Article Social Engagement and All-Cause Mortality: A Focus on Participants of the Minority Aging Research Study.
Academic Article Quantification of race/ethnicity representation in Alzheimer's disease neuroimaging research in the USA: a systematic review.
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