CVL Takes Atlanta

By: Lauren Yglecias | April 12, 2022

More than 20 members of the CVL attended the Cognitive Aging Conference in Atlanta on April 7-10, 2022. It is the premier conference for the presentation of research about aging and cognition based on experimental cognitive psychology, cognitive neuroscience of aging, human factors and ergonomics, and longitudinal studies of age-related cognitive change, its correlates, and determinants.


Presentations:


Michael D. Rugg
Neural pattern analysis and brain aging

Kendra Seaman
Temporal Discounting Across Adulthood

Colleen Frank
Cognitive functioning in later life: Does lifespan enrichment make a difference?

Marianne de Chastelaine
Relationships between age, fMRI correlates of familiarity and item memory
performance under single and dual-task conditions

Sabina Srokova
Scene-selective increases in the functional connectivity of the parahippocampal
place area are greater in young than older adults during encoding but are age-invariant
at retrieval

Mingzhu Hou
Divided attention does not influence neural correlates of recollection in young or older adults

Christopher Garza
The Effect of Delay Durationon Delay Discounting across Adulthood

Amber Kidwai
Structural and functional correlates of longitudinal memory change in a sample of
cognitively healthy older adults

Galston Wong
Effect of skewness on risky decision making in a visual performance task

Sarah Monier
Personality, age, and cognition across the lifespan with inclusion of a middle-aged and a
very old age group

Evan Smith
Predictors of Attrition in a Large-Scale Longitudinal Aging Study

Paulina Skolasinska
Robust fMRI activations across preprocessing pipelines and sites during task
switching in healthy aging and their relationships with cognitive functioning

Ekarin E. Pongpipat
Influence of β-Amyloid and Age on BOLD variability during n-back