AMEX Travel

American Express Travel Videos 1. Create Login 2. Configure Your Profile 3. Comprehensive Training & Booking Your Travel Training Sessions Neo online booking tool end-user training sessions. Open Trainings Every Thursday at 11:00 AM EST USA Join Zoom Meeting https://amexgbt.zoom.us/j/91456484187?pwd=bDM0TlJaanExdDVMTlEybE81bTFJQT09 Meeting ID: 914 5648 4187 Passcode: 260260

44th Annual Meeting INS Early Career Research Award Recipient

44th Annual Meeting INS Early Career Research Award RecipientBoston, Massachusetts, USA, February 3-6, 2016 Ben Hampstead Memory deficits characterize Alzheimerโ€™s disease and its clinical precursor amnestic mild cognitive impairment (aMCI). While a growing body of research furthers our understanding of the detection, characterization, and neuroanatomy of these memory deficits, the clinical translation of these findings […]

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43rd Annual Meeting INS Early Career Research Award Recipient

43rd Annual Meeting INS Early Career Research Award RecipientDenver, Colorado, USA, February 4-7, 2015 Miriam Beauchamp Brain, Behavior and Beyond: Tracing the Social Landscape of Pediatric TBI Through a journey from toddlerhood to adolescence, this talk will provide a multimodal perspective of the impact of pediatric traumatic brain injury (TBI) on social functioning. The emergence […]

Oversimplification in the Study of Emotional Memory

This Short Review critically evaluates three hypotheses about the effects of emotion on memory: First, emotion usually enhances memory. Second, when emotion does not enhance memory, this can be understood by the magnitude of physiological arousal elicited, with arousal benefiting memory to a point but then having a detrimental influence. Third, when emotion facilitates the […]

Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience

Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience Special Request Call for abstracts Prefrontal cortex and executive functions Special issue ofย Journal of Cognitive Neuroscienceย in Honor of Donald T Stuss Edited by Brian Levine, Shayna Rosenbaum, and Anne-Kristin Solbakk Dr. Don Stuss was a key figure in establishing the role of the prefrontal cortex in the scientific study of behavior, […]

Episode 68 | Obstructive Sleep Apnea and Neuropsychology โ€“ With Dr. Mark Aloia

Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is a disorder of breathing during sleep. It can lead to both sleep fragmentation and hypoxia, it has a negative impact on cardiovascular functioning, and it is associated with various neurobiological, cognitive, and emotional sequelae. OSA is underdiagnosed in the general population, and even following successful diagnosis the most popular treatment (positive airway pressure [PAP] devices) is not always well tolerated, leading to low treatment adherence. Given that OSA impacts the brain and behavior, that it is underdiagnosed, and that successful intervention requires a significant behavior change (e.g., PAP adherence), neuropsychologists have a significant role to play in this public health issue. In the current episode, John and Ryan speak with Dr. Mark Aloia about various aspects of OSA, including an in-depth discussion of cognitive/emotional effects of the condition, as well as motivational interviewing techniques to improve PAP adherence.