Program
Thursday, February 20
Poster Session I: 12:00 PM – 2:00 PM
Welcome Remarks: 2:00 PM – 2:15 PM
Session I: Alzheimer’s Disease Biomarkers
2:15 PM – 4:15 PM
2:15 – 2:40 – Blood-based biomarkers in cognitively unimpaired participants: Impact of AD genetic risk and clinical progression
Corinne A. Pettigrew, PhD, Johns Hopkins University
2:40 – 3:05 – Spatial atrophy subtypes are associated with differences in sociodemographic, comorbidity, pathologic, and cognitive factors in diverse populations
Karin Meeker, Ph D, The University of North Texas Health Science Center
3:05 – 3:25 – Break
3:25 – 3:50 – Association between hippocampal-cerebellar functional connectivity with cognition, age, and Alzheimer’s disease risk
Elizabeth R. Paitel, PhD, Johns Hopkins University
3:50 – 4:15 – Social connectedness and cognitive resilience: The role of social cognition
Anne C. Krendl, PhD, Indiana University
Poster Session II: 4:15 PM – 6:15 PM
Friday, February 21
Breakfast: 8:00 AM – 9:00 AM
Session II: Cognitive Aging
9:00 AM – 11:25 AM
9:00 – 9:25 – MindCrowd-Expanded: An online multi-domain assessment of cognitive aging
Lee Ryan, PhD, The University of Arizona
9:25 – 9:50 – Digital Dementia or Technological Reserve? A Meta-Analysis of Digital Technology Use and Cognitive Aging
Michael K. Scullin, PhD, Baylor University
9:50 – 10:15 – Multidomain lifestyles, cognitive status and training effect from a large online cognitive performance dataset
Meishan Ai, PhD, Stanford University
10:15 – 10:35 – Break
10:35 – 11:00 – A Cognitive-Motor Framework for Spatial Navigation in Aging and Alzheimer’s Disease
Paul Hill, PhD, The University of Arizona
11:00 – 11:25 – Reward Motivated Remembering and Forgetting in Younger and Older Adults
Holly J. Bowen, PhD, Southern Methodist University
Group discussion – Brain and cognition over the lifespan:
11:25 AM -11:55 AM
Lunch: 12:00 PM – 1:30 PM
Session III: Brain Development
1:30 PM – 3:00 PM
1:30 – 1:55 – Semantic Learning in Developmental Amnesia
Rachael L. Elward, PhD, London South Bank University
1:55 – 2:20 – Potentially life-long neurocognitive effects of caesarean section birth in humans: visual attention deficits and aberrant functional connectivity of visual brain networks
W. Dale Stevens, PhD, York University
2:20 – 2:45 – Neurophysiological mechanisms supporting memory in the developing medial temporal lobes
Qin Yin, PhD, The University of Texas at Dallas
2:45 – 3:00 – Break
Keynote Address: 3:00 PM – 4:00 PM
Modifiable Risk Factors for Cognitive Aging: The Importance of a Personalized Approach
Kristine Yaffe, MD, UCSF

Poster Session III: 4:00 PM – 6:00 PM
Tex-Mex FIESTA!: 6:45 – 10:00 p.m.
*Registration required
Saturday, February 22
Poster Session IV: 9:00 AM – 11:00 AM
Session IV: Aging Memory
11:00 AM – 12:50 PM
11:00 – 11:25 – Evoking Episodic and Semantic Details With Instructional Manipulation in Aging
Louis Renoult, PhD, University of East Anglia
11:25 – 11:50 – A cognitive ageing advantage – prioritisation of conceptual knowledge during autobiographical narration
Muireann Irish, PhD, The University of Sydney
11:50 – 12:00 – Break
12:00 – 12:25 – Hippocampal neural timescales during movie watching are related to gist memory and to age
Nichole R. Bouffard, PhD, Washington University in St. Louis
12:25 – 12:50 – Memory fidelity in healthy and pathological aging
Helena M. Gellersen, PhD, German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases
Closing Remarks: 12:50 PM – 1:00 PM
POSTER SESSIONS
Poster Session I
Thursday, February 20
12 pm – 2:00 pm
A-1: Age invariant dissociation of fMRI correlates of task effects during episodic memory retrieval
Kidwai, A.1, Srokova, S.2, Rugg, M.D.1
1Center for Vital Longevity, The University of Texas at Dallas, 2 University of Arizona
A-2: The language supporting recognition memory decisions of older and younger adults
Zhang, X., Dobbins, I.G., Washington University in St. Louis
A-3: Differential relationships between cardiorespiratory fitness and cortical thickness across the
adult lifespan
Graham, J.H¹, Cloud, J.A.¹, Hayes, J.P.1,2, Hayes, S.M.1,2,
¹Department of Psychology, The Ohio State University, ²Chronic Brain Injury Initiative, The Ohio State University
A-4: Differential prediction of cognitive performance by brain-age difference measures in adults
Cloud, J.A.¹, Hayes, J.P.1,², Hayes, S.M.1,2 ¹Department of Psychology, The Ohio State University, ²Chronic Brain Injury Initiative, The Ohio State University
A-5: Dopaminergic contributions to functional network reconfiguration and reward memory in aging
Morin, T.M.1,2, Ciampa, C.J.¹, Parent, J.H.1,2, Adornato, A.¹, Cowan, J.L.¹, O’Malley, K.¹,
Tambini, A.³, Cusin, C.², Hooker, J.², Berry, A.S.1
¹Brandeis University, ²Massachusetts General Hospital, ³Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research
A-6: Moderating effects of cortical thickness, volume, and memory performance on age differences in neural reinstatement of scene-related information
Olivier, J. M.¹, Srokova, S.², Rugg, M.D.¹
1Center for Vital Longevity, The University of Texas at Dallas, ²University of Arizona
A-7: Dissociating content-selective and content-independent retrieval-related fMRI BOLD effects
Monier, S.¹, Srokova, S.², Hill, P.², Rugg, M. D.¹
¹Center for Vital Longevity, The University of Texas at Dallas, 2University of Arizona
A-8: Visual attention and strategy use during real-world navigation in younger and older adults
Shearon, J.¹, Rushing, B.1, Head, D.1,2
¹Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Washington
University in St. Louis, ²Department of Radiology, Washington University in St. Louis
A-9: Age-invariancy of functional connectivity increases with neural regions demonstrating
sustained recollection effects
Hou, M., de Chastelaine, M., Rugg, M.D., Center for Vital Longevity,The University of Texas at
Dallas
A-10: Functional brain network organization supports cognitive function in patients with
Alzheimer’s disease-related pathological burden and brain atrophy
Zhang, Z.1, Chan, M.Y.¹, Massett, R.J.¹, Winter-Nelson, E.¹, Wig, G.S.1,2, Alzheimer’s Disease
Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI)
1Center for Vital Longevity,The University of Texas at Dallas, ²The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
A-11: Momentary stress predicts emotion regulation initiation in daily life: The role of cognitive
impairment, age, and perceived control
Wei, M., Gross, A. M., English, T.
Washington University in St. Louis
A-12: Age differences in brain network activation during working memory updating across complexity
and stimulus type
Liu, Y.¹, Elliott, C.¹, Skolasinska, P.², Andreo, M.¹, Basak, C.¹,
¹Center for Vital Longevity,The University of Texas at Dallas,²McGill University
A-13: Enhanced dopamine strengthens the relationship between hippocampal
reinstatement and episodic memory in aging
Ciampa, C. J.¹, Morin, T. M.1,2, Parent, J. H.¹, Adornato, A.¹, Cowan, J. L.¹, O’Malley, K.¹, Tambini, A.³, Cusin, C.², Hooker. J.², Berry, A. S.¹
¹Brandeis University, ²Athinoula A. Martinos Center, Massachusetts General Hospital,
³Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research
A-14: Reliable, long-term at-home
sleep monitoring for multi-night electroencephalography (EEG) assessment in young and older adults
Wachnin, A.¹, Saha, S.², Kim, H.², Seunghyeb,
B.³, Trotti, L.M.⁴, Yeo, W.³, Duarte, A.¹
¹The University of Texas at Austin, ²University of California San Diego, ³Georgia Tech University,
⁴Emory University
A-16: Age-related differences in BOLD signal & performance on the mnemonic similarity task
Dodgen, J., Panda, S., Andreo, M., Basak, C.,
Center for Vital Longevity, The University of Texas at Dallas
A-17: An internal meta-analysis of the age-related positive skew bias
George, P., Seaman, K., Frank, C.
Center for Vital Longevity, The University of Texas at Dallas
A-18: Goal-dependent attenuation of retrieval-related scene reinstatement in young and older adults
de Chastelaine, M.¹, Monier, S.¹, Olivier, J.¹, Srokova, S.², Rugg, M.D.¹, ¹Center for Vital Longevity, The University of Texas at Dallas, ²Department of Psychology, University of Arizona
A-19: Graph theoretical analyses of structure- function relations in Alzheimer’s disease
Merenstein, J., Madden, D., Duke University Medical Center
A-20: Susceptibility to deception is associated with microstructural brain integrity in older
adults
Hung, C.C.¹, Polk, R.J.², Ebner, N.C.³ ¹University of Florida, ²Washington University in St. Louis, ³Center for Cognitive Aging and Memory, McKnight Brain Institute, University of Florida
A-21: Establishing the influence of music- induced emotions on temporal memory structure in aging
Marcus, R.E.¹, Costello, M.S.², Chen, H-Y.¹,Crawford, J.L.¹, McClay, M.³, Clewett, D.V.³, Berry, A.S.1,4, ¹Department of Psychology, Brandeis University, ²Department of Biology, Brandeis University, ³Department of Psychology,
University of California, Los Angeles, ⁴Volen Center for Complex Systems, Brandeis University
A-22: Affective forecasting accuracy and working memory for emotion in younger and older adults
Sarver, K.A.#,1, Bernardini, E.A.#,1, Frank, C.C.², Iordan, A.D.³, Babu, H.J.¹, & Reuter-Lorenz,P.A.¹,
#Dual-first authors who contributed equally to this project, ¹Department of Psychology, University of Michigan, ²Center for Vital Longevity, University of Texas at Dallas, ³Department of Psychiatry, University of Michigan
A-23: Spatial navigation skills in healthy aging and dementia: Insights into cognitive changes and
implications for early detection
Kossowska-Kuhn, D., Gouveia, G., Charness, N., Wagner, R.K.,
Florida State University
A-24: Association of CSF AD biomarkers and lifestyle factors with neuropsychiatric symptoms among non-demented older persons: the BIOCARD study
Soldan, A.¹, Truesdell, V.², Pettigrew, C.¹, Moghekar, A.¹, Zipunnikov, V.³, Spira, A.P.³, Albert, M.¹
¹The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, ²University of Colorado Medical School, ³Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
A-25: Development of norms for the Face Name Associative Memory Test across early, middle, and late adulthood in the NIH toolbox
Ho, E., Karpouzian-Rogers, T., Kaat, A., LaForte, E., Gershon, R.,
Northwestern University
A-26: The role of cautiousness in age differences in reward learning
Frank, C. C.¹, Castrellon, J.² , Samanez-Larkin, G. R.³, Seaman, K. L.¹
¹The University of Texas at Dallas, ²University of California, Los Angeles, ³Duke University
A-27: The relationship between busyness, stress, and cognitive reserve on the neural correlates of episodic memory: Insights from the Alabama brain tudy on risk for dementia
McDonough, I. M.¹,Festini, S. B.², ¹Department of Psychology, Binghamton University, ²Department of Psychology,University of Tampa
A-28: Socioeconomic disparities in cognitive impairment: The role of neighborhood social cohesion
Jang, S., Kim, Y., The University of Texas at Arlington
A-29: Cardiorespiratory fitness and cognitive aging: Unraveling individual differences in cognitive
outcomes
Madero, B.¹, Oehler, C.¹, Magnotta, V.2,4, Long, J.3,5, Pierce, G.L.6,7, Hazeltine, E.H.¹, & Voss,
M.W.¹, ¹Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, University of Iowa, ²Department of
Radiology, University of Iowa, ³Department of Biostatistics, University of Iowa, ⁴Department of
Biomedical Engineering, University of Iowa, ⁵Department of Psychiatry, University of Iowa,
⁶Department of Health and Human Physiology, University of Iowa, ⁷Department of Internal Medicine, University of Iowa
A-30: Cross-sectional and longitudinal associations between impulsivity, amyloid PET, and tau PET in cognitively normal older adults
Toueg, T.N.1,2, Silver, M.A.1,2,3,4, Jagust, W.J.1,2, ¹Department of Neuroscience, University of
California, Berkeley,²Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute, University of California, Berkeley, ³Herbert Wertheim School of Optometry and Vision Science, University of California, Berkeley, ⁴UC Berkeley Center for the Science of Psychedelics, University of California, Berkeley
A-31: Examining age-related changes in aging: A meta-analysis
McOwen, K.¹, Bernard, J.1,2, ¹Texas A&M University, ²Texas A&M Institute for Neuroscience
A-32: Impact of monolingualism and bilingualism on language production across adulthood
Hoover, M., Walters, K., Cosgrove, A., Diaz, M.,
The Pennsylvania State University
Poster Session II
Thursday, February 20
4:15 pm – 6:15 pm
B-1: Effects of memory on consumer choice across adulthood
Black, K.A.1,2, Yu, C.1,2, Chan, J.², Juarez, E.J.1,2, Compton, S.¹, Perez-Balaguer, M.1,3,
Salerno, J.¹, Troutman, A.¹, Marsh, E.J.1,2, de Brigard, F.1,2, Cabeza, R.1,2, Samanez-Larkin, G. R.1,2, ¹Center for Cognitive Neuroscience, Duke University, ²Department of Psychology and
Neuroscience, Duke University, ³Department of Neurobiology, Duke University
B-2: Age, income, and the discounting of delayed monetary losses
Wan, H., Myerson, J., Green, L., Strube, M., Hale, S., Department of Psychological & Brain Science,Washington University in St. Louis
B-3: The relationship between trait worry and cognitive impairment: Preliminary results
Miller, F.M., Dunterman, R., M.S., Teubner- Rhodes, S., Auburn University
B-4: Age-related differences in memory encoding and retrieval during referential processing: A
time–frequency analysis
Karimi, H.¹, Boudewyn, M.², Vandenheever, D.1, Diaz, M.³
¹Mississippi State University, ²University of California, Santa Cruz, ³Pennsylvania State University
B-5: Mapping differences in large-scale brain networks across the lifespan
Chan, M. Y¹, Han, L.¹, Wig, G. S. 1,2, ¹Center for Vital Longevity, The University of Texas at
Dallas, ²University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
B-6: Relational memory ability across the lifespan: Time, space, and association from 8 to 80 years old
Heller-Wight, A., Sexton, J., Phipps, C., Ramirez, M., Wilhelm, A., Armbruster, E., Warren, D.E.,
University of Nebraska Medical
Center, Omaha, NE
B-7: Exploring resilience in aging and preclinical Alzheimer’s disease: association of NPTX2 with
cognitive decline and brain atrophy
Anderson, C.L.¹, Gross, A. L.², Pettigrew, C.¹, Vazquez, J. P.¹, Zhu, Y.¹, Wang, H.², Moghekar,
A.¹, Erus, G.³, Davatzikos, C.³, Oh, S.¹, Na, C. H.¹, Xiao, M.¹, Albert, M.¹, Worley, P.¹, Soldan,
A.¹, ¹Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, ²Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public
Health, ³Artificial Intelligence in Biomedical Imaging Laboratory (AIBIL), Center for Biomedical
Image Computing & Analytics (CBICA), Perelman School of Medicine
B-8: Functional network reconfiguration between rest and movie-watching relates to theory of mind performance among young and older adults
Hughes, C.¹, French, R.C.¹, Betzel, R.F.², Krendl, A.C.¹, ¹Indiana University Bloomington,
²University of Minnesota
B-9: Pickleball “flow”: A cognitive well-being resource for adults aged 60+
Worthington, G.¹, Jackson, S.A.², Gute, G.³, Grybovych-Hafermann, O.⁴, Radunzel, J.⁵, ¹Independent Researcher, Dallas, Texas, USA., ²Private Practice, Queensland, Australia, ³College of Social and Behavioral Sciences, University of Northern Iowa, ⁴University of Northern Iowa, Cedar Falls, ⁵Statistical Consulting Center, Department of Mathematics, University of Northern Iowa
B-10: New language training to measure and promote neurocognitive resilience in healthy aging
Rossi, E.1,2, Treadway, H.¹, Kunath, J.², Weisberg, S.1,2, Ebner, N.1,2, ¹University of Florida,
²University of Florida’s Center for Memory and Aging, ³University of Illinois, Chicago
B-11: Age-related differences in participation coefficient across the adult lifespan using
individualized brain networks
Mitchell, M.E.¹, Wulfekuhle, G.², Perez, D.C.³, Ladwig, Z.³, Jaimes, A.J.⁴, Dworetsky, A.⁵, Labora, N.⁶, Gratton, C.¹, ¹University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, ²University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, ³Northwestern University, ⁴Florida State University,
⁵Washington University in St. Louis, ⁶University of Minnesota
B-12: Online effects of high-definition transcranial direct current stimulation on resting-state brain activity in older adults: A fNIRS analysis
Babu, H.J.¹, DiRita, V.², Lynch, R.M.¹, Zhao, Y.², Rinna, K.², Hampstead, B.M.², Reuter-Lorenz,
P.A.¹, Iordan, A.D.², ¹Department of Psychology, The University of Michigan,²Department of
Psychiatry, The University of Michigan
B-13: Longitudinal associations between episodic memory changes and regional brain volume in
cognitively normal aging
Brackins, T., Rajaram, S., Richmond, L.
Stony Brook University
B-14: The neural recapitulation of emotional memories across the adult lifespan
Faul, L., Voso, L.K., Piccirilli, H.R., Monkman, R.G., Lenza, B.D., Kensinger, E.A.
Boston College
B-15: Age-related shifts in memory organization for narrative events
Delarazan, A.I.¹, March, K.¹, Markantonakis, E.², Dy, J.³, Reagh, Z.M.¹
¹Washington University in St. Louis, ²Radboud University, ³University of California, San Francisco
B-16: Discerning emotional expressions and racial/ethnic identity of black/African American and
hispanic/latine faces
Gonzalez, S.M., Seaman, K.L., Center for Vital Longevity, The University of Texas at Dallas
B-17: The effects of age on the relationship between semantic memory representations
and false episodic memories
Bhatia, A.¹, Cutler, R. A.¹, Devulapalli, H.¹, Pham, P.¹, Kumar, S.¹, Polyn, S.M.², & Duarte, A.1
¹The University of Texas at Austin, ²Vanderbilt University
B-18: Identifying key sleep factors for standardizing sleep research in aging populations
Pedersen, T.J.¹, Toedebusch, C.⁴, Hess, A.⁴, Richardson, R.⁴, Quigley, A.⁴, Robinson,
C.G.¹, Morris, J.C.4,5, Holtzman, D.M.4,5, Gordon, B.A.1,2, Lucey, B.P.4,6, ¹Department of
Psychological & Brain Sciences, Washington University in St. Louis, ²Department of Radiology, Washington University in St. Louis, ⁴Department of Neurology, Washington University in St. Louis, ⁵Knight Alzheimer Disease Research Center, Washington University in St Louis, ⁶Center On Biological Rhythms and Sleep, Washington University in St Louis
B-19: Bilingualism, aging, semantic network estimation
Dukes, M.¹, Nakamura, M.¹, Walters, K.¹, Kiejzer, M.², Diaz, M.¹
¹The Pennsylvania State University, ²University of Groningen
B-20: The mediating role of social support on COVID-19 concern and self-rated physical
health of older adults in the United States
Handique, S., Jang, S., The University of Texas at Arlington
B-21: Tuning-up navigation: Exploring real-time fMRI neurofeedback on navigation
strategy shifts in aging population
Yi, C.¹, Lin, T.¹, Alluri, M.¹, Kunath, J.², Bowers, D.³, Ebner, N.1,3,4,5, Weisberg, S.¹, ¹Department
of Psychology, University of Florida, ²University of Illinois Chicago, ³Department of Clinical
and Health Psychology, University of Florida, ⁴Center for Cognitive Aging and Memory,
University of Florida; ⁵Institute on Aging, University of Florida
B-22: The impact of joint trajectories of peer victimization and perpetration on prefrontal
cortex development during early adolescence
Sasidhar, H. 1,3, Tang, A.², Yoon, L.2, 3
¹Department of Neuroscience, The University of Texas at Dallas, ²Department of Psychology,
The University of Texas at Dallas, ³Center for Vital Longevity, The University of Texas at
Dallas
B-23: A meta-analysis of age-related differences in hippocampal size and navigation and memory abilities
Sahoo, A.K., Weisberg, S.M., Department of Psychology, University of Florida
B-24: Wanderlust or rust: A novel theoretical mechanism for navigation strategy
differences in younger and older adults
Weisberg, S.M., Perez, E., Barnas A.J., Kunath, J.T, Bowers, D., Ebner, N.E.
Department of Psychology, The University of Florida
B-25: Association between living alone versus with others on cognitive domains in
older adults without dementia
Hernandez, S., Kibiloski, K., Brownlow, E., Bryan, G., Burnet, E., Center for Balance
and Aging Studies (CBAS), Department of Kinesiology, William & Mary
B-26: Association between vascular risk,as measured by the CAIDE risk score, and
resting-state functional connectivity in middle-aged females
Kearley, J.¹, Rajagopal, C.², LoParco, S.³, Misic,B.⁴, Rajah, M. N.², ¹Department of Psychology,
McGill University; ²Department of Psychology, Toronto Metropolitan University; ³Department of
Bioengineering, McGill University; ⁴Department of Neurology and Neurosurgery, McGill
University
Cardiovascular health indices differentially predict hippocampal subfield volumes in younger
and older adults
Homayouni, R.¹, Saifullah, S.¹, Sutton, B.P.², Daugherty, A.M.¹, ¹Wayne State University, Detroit, MI, ²University of Illinois Urbana- Champaign D-10: Assessing the generalizability of ADRDs subtypes across diverse cohorts: HABS-HD and ADNI An, G.Z.1,2, Gordon, B.², Sotiras, A.², Millar, P.³, Ances, B.2,3, O’Bryant, S.⁴, Meeker, K.⁴ ¹Division of Computational and Data Sciences, Washington University in St. Louis, ²Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology, Washington University School of Medicine, ³Department of Neurology, Washington University School of Medicine, ⁴Institute for Translational Research, University of North Texas Health Science Center
B-27: Risk decision-making under agerelated stereotypes: A computational
perspective
Liao, S.1,2, Lu, Y.3, Ma, G.1,2, Guo, Z.1,2, Zhang, X.1,2, ¹School of Psychological and Cognitive
Sciences, Peking University, ²Beijing Key Laboratory of Behavior and Mental Health,
Peking University, ³Department of Psychology, Cornell University
B-28: Examining sex differences in dementia risk and cognitive trajectories
Robinson, C.G.¹, Morris, J.C.², Hassenstab, J.², Cruchaga, C.³, Belloy, M.E.², Pedersen,
T.J.¹, Gordon, B.A.⁴, ¹Deparment of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Washington
University in St. Louis, ²Department of Neurology, Washington University in St. Louis, ³Department of Psychiatry, Washington University in St. Louis, ⁴Department of Radiology, Washington University in St. Louis
B-29: Structural insights into decline: Regional differences in older adults with worsening motor and balance performance
Selly, P., Magalhaes, T., Bernard, J., Texas A&M University
B-30: Cortical thickness and age-associated executive function: Influence of dopamine
and health & lifestyle factors
Gonen, C., Thompson, A.C., Kraft, J.N., Miranda, G.G., Rodrigue, K.M., Kennedy, K.M.
Center for Vital Longevity, The University of Texas at DallasB-31: Simulating real-life peer comparisons: How feedback relative to a friend shapes
adolescents’ self-esteem
Price, H., Yoon, L., Tang, A., Painter, T., Center for Vital Longevity, The University of
Texas at Dallas
B-32: Differences in cerebello-basal ganglia functional connectivity in mild cognitive impairment
and Alzheimer’s disease
Herrejon, I.A.¹, Jackson, T.B.², Hicks, T. T.¹, Bernard, J.A.¹, & Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative, ¹Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Texas A&M University, ²Vanderbilt Memory and Alzheimer’s Center, Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Poster Session III
Friday, February 21
4:00 pm – 6:00 pm
C-1: Robust predictive mechanisms in aging: Insights from behavioral and neuroimaging research
Martin, M.1, Schuckart, M.2, Obleser, J.², Hartwigsen, G.1,3, ¹Max Planck Institute for Human
Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Germany, ²Department of Psychology, University of Lübeck, Germany, ³Wilhelm Wundt Institute for Psychology, Leipzig University, Germany
C-2: Age-related mobility deficits are associated with worse wayfinding ability in a seated virtual
navigation paradigm
Chargo, A.N.1,2, Fritz, N.E.3,4, Daugherty, A.M.1,2,4, ¹Department of Psychology, Wayne State
University, ²Institute of Gerontology, Wayne State University, ³Department of Health Care Sciences, Wayne State University, ⁴Translational Neuroscience Program and Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neuroscience, School of Medicine, Wayne State University
C-3: Factors linking interoception and sleep across the adult lifespan
Seo, A., Nishiyama, R., Lee, K., Duarte, A., The University of Texas at Austin
C-4: Differential effects of object and spatial information overlap on new learning in younger and
older adults
Kim, S.¹, Chaloupka, B.2,3, Gonzales, H.¹, Bennett, I.J.¹, Zeithamova, D.2,3, Dimsdale- Zucker,
H.R.¹, ¹Department of Psychology, University of California, Riverside, ²Department of Psychology, University of Oregon, ³Institute of Neuroscience, University of Oregon
C-5: Exploring age-related memory with preliminary findings from an inclusive face- name fMRI task
Broadnax, M.¹,², Leskow, J.¹,², Veliz, P.2,3, Seagly, K.2,4, Eckner, J.T.2,4, Eleanna Varangis,
E.¹,², ¹University of Michigan School of Kinesiology; ²Michigan Concussion Center, ³University of
Michigan School of Nursing; ⁴University of Michigan Medicine Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
C-6: Investigating the cognitive correlates of semantic and perceptual false memory in older and
younger adults: A multi-group latent variable approach
West, J.T.1, Wagner, R.L.¹, Steinkrauss, A.², Dennis, N.A.¹, ¹The Pennsylvania State University,
²Boston College
C-7: Human vs AI emotion classification of diverse faces
Eisenberg, L., Seaman, K., Center for Vital Longevity, The University of Texas at Dallas
C-8: Underlying mechanisms of affective response to exercise: Preliminary results
Stojanovic, M., Huynh, T., DelGiudice, M., Head, D., Washington University in St. Louis
C-9: Associations between cognition and temporal discounting in cognitively normal older adults
Poole, O.¹, Stites, S.D.² , Mechanic-Hamilton, D.², Coykendall, C.², Wolk, D.A.², Kable, J.W.²,
Lempert, K.M.¹, ¹Adelphi University, ²The University of Pennsylvania
C-10: The role of ACC volume on the relationship between sleep quality and emotional episodic
memory across the adult lifespan
Campbell, J.¹, Lee, K.², Duarte, A.¹, ¹The University of Texas at Austin, ²Georgia State University
C-11: Development of the cerebellar language system following damage to the cerebral cortex
Wang, B.¹, Tuckute, G.4,5, Kean, H.4,5, Paunov, A.M.4,5, Blank, I.A.4,5, Fedorenko, E.4,5, D’Mello, A. M.1,2,3, ¹Department of Psychology, University of Texas at Dallas, ²Department of Psychiatry, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, ³Peter O’Donnell Jr. Brain Institute, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, ⁴Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, ⁵McGovern Institute for Brain Research, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
C-12: Neural state changes during movie watching relate to episodic memory in younger and older adults
Henderson, S.E.¹, Oetringer, D.², Geerligs, L.2‡, Campbell, K.L.3‡, ¹The University of Texas at
Austin, ²Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, Radboud University, ³Brock
University
‡shared senior authorship
C-13: Adolescent development in adjusting self-disclosure of success and failure to a friend’s
outcomes
Painter, T.¹, Smitherman, I.1,2, Tang, A.3, Yoon, L.1,3, ¹Center for Vital Longevity, The
University of Texas at Dallas, ²Cognition and Neuroscience PhD Program, University of Texas at
Dallas, ³Department of Psychology, University of Texas at Dallas
C-14: Differential theta modulation of age-invariant and age-related subsequent memory in medial parietal regions
Kriegel, J.L.S.¹, Arya, S.², Kota, S.³, Tan, R.J.¹ and Lega, B.C.¹, ¹University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Department of Neurological Surgery, ²University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Medical School, ³University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Pediatrics: Neonatal and Perinatal
C-15: Potential benefits of the neurotrophic response to an acute bout of exercise: preliminary
data
K. Baller, M.¹, DelGuidice¹, T. Huynh1, D. Head1,2, ¹Washington University Department of
Psychological & Brain Sciences, ²Washington University Department of Radiology
C-16: Neighborhood-level and tract-level risks for age-related memory decline: preliminary analyses from the detroit aging brain study
Lee, C.E.1,2, Dahle, C.L2, Daugherty, A.M.1,2,3 ¹Translational Neuroscience Program and Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neuroscience, School of Medicine, Wayne State University, ²Institute of Gerontology, Wayne State University, ³Department of Psychology, Wayne
State University
C-17: Visual attention and positive skew bias: An eye-tracking Study
Syed Abdul, B.¹, Frank, C.C.¹, Khan, L.¹, Smitherman, I.W.¹, Lilly, L. H.¹, Eisenberg, L.¹,
Isaacowitz, D.M.², Seaman, K.L.¹, ¹Center for Vital Longevity, The University of Texas at Dallas,
²Washington University in St. Louis
C-18: Sleep and hippocampal subfield volume in typically developing periadolescent children:
Findings from the PRANK study
Acharya, A.1,2, Heller-Wight, A.¹, Sexton, J.¹, Phipps, C.¹, Ramirez, M.¹, Wilhelm, A.¹,
Armbruster, E.¹, Warren, D.E.¹, ¹The University of Nebraska Medical Center, ²The University of
Texas at Austin
C-19: Handgrip strength relates to corticospinal tract microstructure in older adults
Solis, K.¹, Page, A.¹, Seitz, A.², Hu, X.¹, Langley, J.¹, Bennett, I.J.¹
¹University of California, Riverside, ²Northeastern University
C-20: Cognitive appraisal and affective response to exercise: Preliminary results
Huynh, T., Liu, A., Head, D., Stojanovic, M.
Department of Neurology, Washington University in St. Louis
C-21: The combined effect of mindfulness meditation and high attentional control training on
cognition and brain networks in healthy aging
Skolasinska, P., Basak, C., Center for Vital Longevity, The University of Texas at Dallas
C-22: Structural connectivity drives age-related changes in mnemonic representations
Howard, C.M.¹, Gillette, K.¹, Huang, S.¹, Mittal, V.¹, Deng, L.², Cabeza, R.¹, Davis, S.W.¹
¹Duke University, ²University of Arizona
C-23: Age differences in the neural correlates of perspective change may contribute to spatial
memory deficits in old age
Srokova, S.¹, Barnes, C. A.1,2, Ekstrom, A. D.1,2, 1Department of Psychology, University of
Arizona, ²McKnight Brain Institute, University of Arizona
C-24: Implications of the use of special interests in evaluating language expression in ASD
children
Zeng, C.¹, Lanka, J.¹, Courreges, A.², Jain, A.², Tahami, T.², Lewicki, J.¹, Guerrero, A.¹, Lei Su,
P.¹, D’Mello, A.1,2, ¹The University of Texas at Dallas, ²University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
C-25: The impact of menopausal changes on cognition and fine motor control
James, J., Magalhaes, T., Selley, P., Bernard, J.,Texas A&M University
C-26: COVID-19 as a life-limiting stressor: socioemotional selectivity and future time perspective
shifts in young and older adults
Bartosz, D.¹, McDonald, K.¹, Leaver, E.¹, Patterson, M.M.¹, Walsh, S.², Payne, S.¹, Alvarez, W.¹, Patterson, M. C.³, ¹Department of Psychology, Salisbury University, ²Department of Mental Health, Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, ³Department of Education, University of Maryland Eastern Shore
C-27: Influence of beta amyloid burden on longitudinal change in mnemonic discrimination
Kraft, J.N., Nair, J., Gonen, C., Skotnicki, M., Rodrigue, K.M., Kennedy, K.M., Center for Vital
Longevity, School of Behavioral and Brain Sciences, The University of Texas at Dallas
C-28: Longitudinal links between dopamine decline and cognitive aging: Preliminary results from the 10-Year COBRA follow-up
Lundgren, E.¹, Axelsson, J.¹, Andersson, M.², Riklund, K.¹, Bäckman, L.³, Lövdén, M.⁴, Lindenberger, U.⁵, Nyberg, L.1,2, Karalija, N.²
¹Department of Diagnostics and Intervention, Umeå Center for Functional Brain Imaging, Umeå
University, ²Department of Medical and Translational Biology, Umeå University, ³Aging Research
Center, Karolinska Institutet & Stockholm University, ⁴Department of
Psychology, University of Gothenburg, ⁵Center for Lifespan Psychology, Max Planck Institute for
Human Development, Berlin
C-29: Mnemonic prediction error and memory updating in younger and older adults
Seo, M.S.¹, Wahlheim, C.N.², Giovanello, K.S.¹ ¹The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill,
²The University of North Carolina at Greensboro
C-30: Higher diffusion coefficients in glial- specific metabolites may indicate age- related
hippocampal neuroinflammation: A preliminary diffusion-weighted MRS study
Bennett, I.J.¹, Langley, J.², Barrios, R.¹, Ng, K.¹, Zubair, J.¹, Kuncharapu, S.¹, and Hu, X.P.2,3 ¹Department of Psychology, University of California, Riverside, ²Center for Advanced
Neuroimaging, University of California Riverside, ³Department of Bioengineering, University of
California Riverside
C-31: Examination of life course characterization of neighborhood deprivation on brain health outcomes
Coats, U.K.1,2, Chan, M.¹, Sullins, C.¹, Martin, A.¹, Seale, M.A.¹, Pipoly, M.¹, Dasara, A.¹, Kolluri, S.¹, Brown, E.S.³, Reingle-Gonzalez, J.M.⁴, Park, D.C.1,2,3, Wig, G.S.1,2,3, ¹Center for Vital Longevity, School of Behavioral and Brain Sciences, University of Texas at Dallas, ²Department
of Psychology, School of Behavioral and Brain Sciences, University of Texas at Dallas, ³Department of Psychiatry, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, ⁴Meadows Mental
Health Policy Institute
C-32: Characterizing functional brain networks in Alzheimer’s disease-related cognitive fluctuation
Massett, R.¹, Zhang, Z.¹, Chan, M.¹, Wig, G.,1,2 ¹Center for Vital Longevity, The University
of Texas at Dallas, ²University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
Poster Session IV
Saturday, February 22
9:00 am – 11:00 am
D-1: Optimizing the What Matters most surveyusing insights from behavioral sciences: A refined measure of health values to inform healthcare decisions and goals for older adults
Bush Amspoker, A.¹, Alsharawy, A.², Zahidie, A.², Naik, A.2,3, 4, ¹Department of Medicine, Section of Health Services Research, Baylor College of Medicine, ²The Department of Management, Policy, and Community Health, School of Public Health, University of Texas Health
Science Center at Houston, ³Institute On Aging, University of Texas Health Science Center at
Houston, ⁴Center for Innovations in Quality, Effectiveness and Safety, Michael E. DeBakey VA
Medical Center
D-2: Auditory and visual cueing for gait improvement in Parkinson’s disease
Gouveia, G., Kossowska-Kuhn, D., Florida State University
D-3: Do age and episodic memory differentially relate to tract-specific white matter
microstructure?: Cross-sectional and longitudinal analyses in a healthy adult sample
Popoviciu, A., Rajaram, S., Brackins, T., Richmond, L.L., Stony Brook University
D-4: Cortico-striato-pallido-thalamic loop: Effects of age and dopaminergic predisposition on the
spatial gradients of gray-matter neurite microstructural properties
Pongpipat, E.E., Kennedy, K.M., & Rodrigue, K. M., Center for Vital Longevity, University of Texas at Dallas
D-5: Does the rate of lobular cerebellar and hippocampal volume decline over time differ between individuals with stable and declining MoCA scores?
Magalhães, T.N.C.¹, Hicks, T.H.¹, Bernard, J.A.1,2, ¹Department of Psychological & Brain Sciences, Texas A&M University, ²Texas A&M Institute for Neuroscience, Texas A&M University
D-6: Individual differences in neurophysiological responses to social evaluation in adolescents: A
systematic review
Ditzler, K., Yoon, L., Ciesla, M., Center for Vital Longevity, The University of Texas at Dallas
D-7: Sleep efficiency during the retention period predicts associative memory consolidation in both young and old adults
Nyan, C.1, Ram, S.1, Wachnin, A. J.1, Mirjalili, S.1,2, Seraji, M.³, Duarte, A.¹
¹Department of Psychology, University of Texas at Austin, ²Department of Psychology, University of Oregon, ³Tri-Institutional Georgia State University/Georgia Institute of Technology/Emory University Center for Translational Research in Neuroimaging and Data Science
D-8: Multi-attribute memory and decision- making across the lifespan: neural representations and behavioral dynamics
Yu, C., Black, K., Chan, J., Juarez, E., Marsh, E.J., De Brigard, F., Samanez-Larkin, G.R., Cabeza, R., Duke University
D-9: Cardiovascular health indices differentially predict hippocampal subfield volumes in younger
and older adults
Homayouni, R.¹, Saifullah, S.¹, Sutton, B.P.², Daugherty, A.M.¹, ¹Wayne State University, Detroit, MI, ²University of Illinois Urbana- Champaign
Simulating real-life peer comparisons: How feedback relative to a friend shapes adolescents’ self-esteem
Price, H., Yoon, L., Tang, A., Painter, T., Center for Vital Longevity, The University of Texas at Dallas
D-10: Assessing the generalizability of ADRDs subtypes across diverse cohorts: HABS-HD and ADNI
An, G.Z.1,2, Gordon, B.², Sotiras, A.², Millar, P.³, Ances, B.2,3, O’Bryant, S.⁴, Meeker, K.⁴ ¹Division of Computational and Data Sciences, Washington University in St. Louis, ²Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology, Washington University School of Medicine, ³Department of Neurology, Washington University School of Medicine, ⁴Institute for Translational Research, University of North Texas Health Science Center
D-11: Impact of monolingualism and bilingualism on language production across adulthood
Hoover, M., Walters, K., Cosgrove, A., Diaz, M.,
The Pennsylvania State University
Effects of APOE ε4 on brain structure, function, and connectivity at midlife: A scoping
review
Lissaman, R.¹, Anjum, S.², Quaiattini, A.³, Rajah, M.N.1,4, ¹Department of Psychiatry, McGill
University, ²Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH), ³Schulich Library of Physical Sciences, Life Sciences, and Engineering, McGill University, ⁴Department of Psychology, Toronto Metropolitan University
D-12: Putting unitization to the test: An investigation into retrieval paradigm on the mechanism
underlying unitization as we age
Carpenter, C.M., Dennis, N.A., The Pennsylvania State University
D-13: The role of age in deepfake detection accuracy
Washburn, S.R., Barnas, A.J., Faulkner, R., Lin, T., Ebner, N.C., The University of Florida
D-14: Complexity-dependent age differences in working memory-related functional connectivity
Sherard, G.H.¹, Zhao, Y.², Abdelkarim, D.H.³, Turner, M.¹, & Rypma, B.¹
¹The University of Texas at Dallas, ²University of California-Irvine, ³University of
Illinois-Urbana Champaign
D-15: Task-related alterations in large-scale brain network organization vary across adulthood
Pipoly, M.¹, Chan, M.¹, Zhang, Z.1,2, Winter-Nelson, E.1,2, Wig, G. S.1,3
¹Center for Vital Longevity, School of Behavioral and Brain Sciences, University of Texas at
Dallas, ²Department of Psychology, School of Behavioral and Brain Sciences, University of Texas at Dallas, ³Department of Psychiatry, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
D-16: A comparison of automated and
semi-automated white matter hyperintensity segmentation techniques
Edwards, V., Pongpipat, E., Lung, T.C., Kraft, J., Rodrigue, K.M., Kennedy, K.M.
Center for Vital Longevity, The University of Texas at Dallas
D-17: Modeling decision making in aging: Insights from the Florida-and-Georgia (FLAG) gambling task
Wang, S.¹, Wilson, R.C.², Ebner, N.C.³, Lighthall, N.R.¹, ¹University of Central Florida, ²Georgia
Institute of Technology, ³University of Florida
D-18 HIV, age, and sex impact white matter integrity in the left uncinate
Thomas, P.¹, Walsh, H.¹, Gallagher, R.C.¹, Shattuck, K.1,2, Mahmood, D.³, Moore, D.J.⁴, Ellis
R.J.4,5, Jiang X.¹, ¹Department of Neuroscience, Georgetown University Medical Center, ²Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Georgetown University Medical Center, ³Department of Medicine, Georgetown University Medical Center, ⁴Department of Psychiatry, ⁵Department of Neurosciences, University of California
D-19: Aging and Alzheimer’s disease risk factors are associated with differential decline in
regional medial temporal lobe volumes
Nguyen, L.T., Nair, J.K., Foster, C.M., Webb, C.E., Kennedy, K.M., Rodrigue, K.M.
Center for Vital Longevity, The University of Texas at Dallas
D-20: Introducing the mobile toolbox: Remote assessment for measuring cognitive change across the lifespan
Young, S.R., Zukauskas, A.K., Hosseinian, Z., Novack, M.A., Pila, S., Han, C., Kaat, A, Dworak,
E.M., Nowinski, C.J., Gershon, R.C. Department of Medical Social Sciences, Feinberg School of
Medicine, Northwestern University
D-21: The pulse of positivity bias: Heart rate variability and memory performance in healthy older
adults
Cline, S.¹, Wilson, S.², Bowen, H.¹
¹Southern Methodist University, ²University of Alabama at Birmingham
D-22: Towards a functional future for the cognitive neuroscience of human aging
Mooraj, Z.1,2, Salami, A.3,4,5,6, Campbell, K.L.⁷, Dahl, M. J.1,2,8, Kosciessa, J.Q.⁹, Nassar, M.R.10,11, Werkle-Bergner, M.¹, Craik, F.I.M.12, Lindenberger, U.1,2, Mayr, U.13, Rajah, M.N.14,15, Raz, N.1,16, Nyberg, L.4,5,17, Garrett, D.D.1,2, ¹Center for Lifespan Psychology, Max Planck Institute for Human Development, ²Max Planck UCL Centre for Computational Psychiatry and Ageing Research, ³Aging Research Center, Karolinska Institute & Stockholm University, ⁴Umeå Center for Functional Brain Imaging (UFBI), Umeå University, ⁵Department of Medical and Translational Biology, Umeå University, ⁶Wallenberg Center for Molecular Medicine, Umeå University, ⁷Department of Psychology, Brock University, ⁸Leonard Davis School of Gerontology, University of Southern California, ⁹Radboud University, Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, 10Robert J. & Nancy D. Carney Institute for Brain Science, Brown University, 11Department of Neuroscience, Brown University, 12Rotman Research Institute at Baycrest, 13Department of Psychology, University of Oregon,14Department of Psychiatry, McGill University, 15Department of Psychology, Toronto Metropolitan University, 16Department of Psychology, Stony Brook University, 17Department of Diagnostics and Intervention, Diagnostic Radiology, Umeå University
D-23: Slow wave sleep, aging, and encoding of spatial environments
Maybrier, H.1, Head, D.1,2,3, ¹Department of Psychological & Brain Sciences, Washington University in St. Louis, ²Knight Alzheimer Disease Research Center, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, ³Department of Radiology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis
D-24: Cross-species comparison of large- scale functional brain network alterations in aging
humans, marmosets, and mice
Winter-Nelson, E.¹, Bergmann, E.2,3, Chan, M.Y.¹, Han, L.¹, Zhang, Z.¹, Russ, B.E.⁴, Weiss, A.R.⁵, Kahn, I.2,3, Wig, G.S.1,6, ¹Center for Vital Longevity at The University of Texas at Dallas,
²Rappaport Faculty of Medicine, Technion – Israel Institute of Technology, ³Zuckerman Mind Brain Behavior Institute and Department of Neuroscience, Columbia University,⁴Nathan S.
Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research, ⁵Division of Neuroscience, Oregon National Primate
Research Center, ⁶Department of Psychiatry, The University of Texas Southwestern Medical
Center
D-25: Examining the impacts of age and cognitive control on the positive-skew bias
Wong, G., Frank, C.C., Abdi, T., Eisenberg, L., George, P., Hagi, L.R., Joseph, S., Khan, L., Lilly, L.H., Sheikh, H., Smitherman, I.W., Syed Abdul, B., Torres, N.L., Seaman, K.L.,
Center for Vital Longevity, The University of Texas at Dallas
D-26: Parietal cortex activity supports memory retrieval across development
Vahidi, P.¹, Yin, Q.², Younger, P.², Asano, E.¹, Johnson, E. L.³, & Ofen, N.¹,², ¹Wayne State University, ²Center for Vital Longevity, The University of Texas at Dallas, ³Northwestern University
D-27: Examining the association of geospatial environmental complexity and Alzheimer’s disease biomarkers
Shin, N.¹, Izurieta Munoz, H.¹, Rodrigue, K.M.¹, Yuan, M.², Kennedy, K.M.¹, ¹Center for Vital
Longevity, School of Behavioral and Brain Sciences, The University of Texas at Dallas, ²School of Economic, Political, and Policy Sciences, The University of Texas at Dallas
D-28: Assessing specificity in the relation between individual differences in hippocampal subfields and memory
Canada, K.L.¹, Yu, Q.¹, Homayouni, R.¹, Daugherty, A.M.¹, Ofen, N.1,2,
¹Wayne State University, ²Center for Vital Longevity, University of Texas at Dallas
D-29: The impact of physiological arousal on memory encoding and the negative trade-off effect in younger and middle-aged adults
Kafafi, S.S.¹, Niu, X.¹, Utayde, M.F.¹, Sanders, K.G.¹, Cunningham, T.J.², Kensinger, E.A.³,
& Payne, J.D.¹, ¹Department of Psychology, University of Notre Dame, ²The Center for Sleep &
Cognition, Harvard Medical School & Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, ³Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, Boston College
D-30: Age-related oscillatory changes in the hippocampus and prefrontal cortex during associative episodic memory
Arya, S., Kriegel, J., Lega, B., Department of Neurological Surgery, University of Texas
Southwestern Medical Center