PIA Overview:
Electrophysiology
Chair: Fiona Randall
Electrophysiological methods have provided important insights into the way the brain processes information, from single neurons to large-scale brain networks. These methods have also contributed to our understanding of how Alzheimer's disease affects brain activity. Electrophysiological methods provide a crucial bridge between brain activity and cognition, and show considerable promise as translatable biomarkers in both preclinical and clinical applications.
The Electrophysiology PIA will provide a forum for education through symposia and lectures, provide a platform for networking with members who share subspecialties and support junior scientists and other researchers to learn about the latest developments in the field.
PIA Objectives:
Educate and advocate applications of electrophysiological measures, including EEG, MEG and others, in the study of Alzheimer's disease.
Organize symposia and other educational activities around specific themes relating to EEG, MEG and other electrophysiological measures applied to Alzheimer's disease.
On Twitter? Follow @ISTAART and use #ElectrophysPIA to share PIA news and stay up to date on PIA activity.
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- Alliance of Women Alzheimer's Researchers (AWARE)
- Atypical Alzheimer's disease and Associated Syndromes
- Biofluid Based Biomarkers
- Cognition
- Clinical Trials Advancement and Methods
- Design and Data Analytics
- Diversity and Disparities
- Down Syndrome and Alzheimer's Disease
- Electrophysiology
- Immunity and Neurodegeneration
- Neuroimaging
- Neuropsychiatric Syndromes
- Non-pharmacological Interventions
- Nutrition, Metabolism, and Dementia
- Perioperative Cognition and Delirium
- Reserve, Resilience and Protective Factors
- Subjective Cognitive Decline
- Technology
- Vascular Cognitive Disorders
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