HAI Book 2025 - Flipbook - Page 55
09:15 am
Neuroimaging of older Latino adults in Boston:
Linking established and new cohorts
09:25 am – 09:55 am
Discussion
09:55 am - 10:00 am
Concluding remarks and resources
10:00 am - 10:05 am
Blitz Session 2A Short Poster Presentations
10:00 am
Introduction
10:02 am
The role of cohort heterogeneity in predicting
AD/ADRD cognitive decline
10:03 am
10:04 am
Sex moderates the association between
regional tau and longitudinal cognitive decline in
A4 and LEARN studies
Low tau in A´-positive cognitively impaired
individuals: Alzheimer9s disease or something
more?
Yakeel Quiroz, Massachusetts General Hospital,
Boston, MA, USA
Peiwei Liu, Department of Neuroscience,
University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA,
US
Annie Li, Department of Neurology,
Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard
Medical School, Boston, MA, US
Konstantinos Ioannou, Karolinska Institutet,
Stockholm, SE
10:00 am
Introduction
10:05 am - 11:00 am
Poster Session 2A (repeating in the afternoon as 2B) - Boards 59-116
Interpretable prediction of amyloid PET
positivity using non-negative matrix
factorization
Data-driven biomarker discovery nominates
novel diagnostic plasma biomarkers and
provides insights into Alzheimer9s disease
pathophysiology in an African American cohort
Longitudinal and cross-sectional interplay
between astrocyte activation and ventricular
changes promoting Alzheimer9s disease
pathology
Longitudinal multicenter head-to-head
harmonization of tau PET tracers: an overview
of the HEAD study cohort
Higher time varying brain functional
connectivity is associated with slower tau
accumulation at the preclinical stage of
Alzheimer9s disease
David Jones, Department of Neurology, Mayo
Clinic, ROCHESTER, MN, US
Lindsey Kuchenbecker, Department of
Neuroscience, Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville, FL,
USA, Jacksonville, FL, US
Seyyed Ali Hosseini, Translational
Neuroimaging Laboratory, McGill Research
Centre for Studies in Aging, McGill University,
Montreal, QC, Canada, Montréal, QC, CA
Firoza Lussier, University of Pittsburgh,
Pittsburgh, PA, US
Mohammadali Javanray, McGill University,
Montreal, QC, CA
Graph convolutional networks to predict
cognitive decline at the individual level in
Alzheimer9s disease
Min Su Kang, Artificial Intelligence and
Computational Neurosciences lab, Sunnybrook
Research Institute, University of Toronto,
Toronto, ON, CA
Low tau in A´-positive cognitively impaired
individuals: Alzheimer9s disease or something
more?
Konstantinos Ioannou, Karolinska Institutet,
Stockholm, SE
A plasma clock for Alzheimer disease based on
%p-tau217
Network-based amyloid-´ pathology predicts
subsequent cognitive decline in cognitively
normal older adults
Associations between APOE-TOMM40 8523
haplotype variants and limbic system white
HAI2025 - 55
Kellen K. Petersen, Department of Neurology,
Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis,
MO, US
Hengda He, Cognitive Neuroscience Division,
Department of Neurology, Columbia University,
Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons,
New York, NY, US
Katelyn Mooney, University of California Los
Angeles, Neuroscience Interdepartmental