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Photos by Andrew Shurtleff |
| Above
(left to right) are the pilot grant awardees: Bethany Teachman,
Bernhard
Maier, Chad Dodson, Barry Condron, Carol Manning and John Lach.
Timothy Salthouse (below right) directs the Institute on
Aging. Sara
Agre (left) is the institute administrator. |
June
14, 2004
By
Fariss Samarrai
Six
researchers who are conducting age-related studies were honored
and awarded research grants during
a reception June 1 at the new offices of the University’s
Institute on Aging.
One of the primary goals of the institute is to stimulate research
related to issues of aging, and to encourage the formation
of collaborative teams to
pursue
innovative approaches to topics relevant to later life. To support that goal,
the institute, with funding from the Office of the Vice President for Research
and Graduate Studies, is providing “seed money” of up to $30,000
for pilot projects that have a likelihood of generating substantial funding from
government agencies or foundations.
The six pilot projects receiving funding range from a project
for developing a model system for testing therapies for
degenerative disorders, to developing
a wearable health monitoring device, to studying the effects of age on
memory and cognition. More than 40 U.Va. investigative
teams involving more than
100 researchers submitted applications for the pilot grants.
“The
aging of America is a major societal issue,” said Timothy Salthouse,
director of the Institute
on Aging and the Brown-Forman Professor of Psychology. “People
are living longer, and are healthy longer, but ultimately many older people will
develop Alzheimer’s disease and other long-term health problems. These
pilot projects have great potential for future funding and are designed to address
several important areas of aging.”
The primary mission of the Institute on Aging is to enrich the
lives of those who are old today and those who will be old tomorrow
by acting as a catalyst and coordinator for interdisciplinary research,
education and service programs within the University of Virginia.
The institute promotes basic and applied research on topics related
to aging, serves as an information and education resource about
aging issues, and seeks to influence the development and implementation
of public policy that addresses the needs of older adults.
During
the coming academic year, the institute will sponsor two public
lectures on aging, featuring eminent speakers.
Caleb Finch,
director of the Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center at the
University of Southern California, will present “Evolution
Shapes the Schedule of Aging in Neural Systems” on Oct. 1
at 3:30 p.m. in the McLeod Hall Auditorium. Finch’s research
has led to breakthroughs in the understanding and treatment of
Alzheimer’s.
Ian Deary of the University of Edinburgh will speak March 18,
2005, on “A Lifetime of Intelligence: Following up the Scottish
Mental Surveys of 1932 and 1947.” Deary is the principal
investigator of interdisciplinary studies examining late-life correlates
of childhood intelligence.
To
learn more about the Institute on Aging, visit its website at
www.virginia.
edu/aginginstitute/
The
Six Awardees Are:
Barry
Condron
Associate professor of biology. Condron is conducting genetics
studies using fruit flies for developing a model system for testing
therapies for age-related neurological degenerative disorders.
Chad Dodson
Assistant professor of psychology, is looking at the effects
of age on monitoring and regulating memory accuracy. He will
use several
methods to test older adults’ memory and their ability to
improve memory.
John Lach
Assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering,
is developing a noninvasive portable monitoring system that
could
be worn by a user in a nonmedical environment to continually
measure biological, physiological and functional health indicators.
Bernhard Maier
Assistant professor of neuroscience, will
investigate the interactions of longevity genes with each other
and a cellular growth suppressor. Maier and his team hope
to develop chemical compounds to reverse the aging of cells
and
organisms.
Carol Manning
Associate professor of neurology. Using magnetic resonance
spectroscopy, Manning’s team will examine differences in biochemical activity
in relevant areas of the brains of healthy elderly people, people
with mild cognitive impairment and people with Alzheimer’s
disease. Their long-term goal is to use the data to help identify
healthy individuals and those with mild cognitive impairment who
are at increased risk for developing Alzheimer’s and other
dementias.
Bethany Teachman
Assistant professor of psychology. This project will look
at aging, perceived cognitive decline and the development
of anxiety.
Teachman
hopes to establish norms for obsessive-compulsive disorder
in older populations to ensure proper diagnosis as well
as to more
deeply
examine the cognitive model of obsessive-compulsive disorder
in older populations.
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