CURRICULUM VITAE

Mark Barry Moss

Education

University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA, 1969, B.S., Psychology Northeastern University, , MA, 1973, M.A., Psychology Northeastern University, Boston, MA, 1979, Ph.D., Psychology (Experimental with specialization in Cognitive , Advisor: Helen Mahut)

Postdoctoral Training

1979-1982 and Clinical Neuroscience, , Unit, Beth Israel Hospital, Boston, MA (Advisors: Norman Geschwind, MD, Gary Van Hoesen, PhD, and Marsel Mesulam, MD)

1982-1983 , School of Medicine, Department of Neurology, University Hospital, Boston, MA (Advisor: Roberta White, PhD)

Academic and Hospital Appointments

1979-1982 Research Fellow in Neurology, Harvard Medical School and Beth Israel Hospital, Boston, MA

1982-1983 Research Associate in Anatomy, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, MA

1983-1985 Assistant Research Professor in Anatomy, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, MA

1983-present Clinical and Research Fellow in Psychiatry, (Psychology) Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA

1985-1988 Assistant Professor in Anatomy and in Neurology (Neuropsychology) Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, MA

1986-present Collaborative Scientist, Division of Neurobiology, Yerkes National Primate Research Center, Emory University, Atlanta, GA

1989-1998 Associate Professor in Anatomy and Neurobiology and in Neurology (Neuropsychology) Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, MA

1998-2001 Interim Chair, Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, MA

1998-present Professor in Anatomy and Neurobiology, and in Neurology (Neuropsychology), Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, MA

2001-present Chairman, Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, MA

2015-present Waterhouse Professor and Chair of Anatomy & Neurobiology, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, MA

Licensure Licensed Teacher Massachusetts – 1970, Secondary School Biology & Chemistry, Licensure- Psychologist-#3324, (Specialization in Geriatric Neuropsychology) Health Provider, State of Massachusetts, 1984-present

Clinical Experience

Clinical Neuropsychologist, Boston Medical Center, 1983-present

Chief Neuropsychologist, Huntington's Disease Center Without Walls, 1985-1986

Member, Geriatric Neurobehavioral Evaluation Unit, Massachusetts General Hospital, 1982- 2005

Geriatric Neuropsychologist, Kindred Healthcare System (consultant) – 1998 to 2012

Clinical Neuropsychologist, Alzheimer’s Disease Center, Boston University School of Medicine, 2000-2009.

Training Awards

National Science Foundation Predoctoral Training Award, Northeastern University, Department of Psychology, Boston, MA, 1971-1974 (Sponsor: Dr. Helen Mahut)

National Research Service Award, NIH-NINCDS, Harvard Medical School, Neurology Unit, Beth Israel Hospital, Boston, MA, 1979-1982 (Neuronal Plasticity in the Central Nervous System; Sponsor: Dr. Norman Geschwind)

Research Awards

NIH MERIT Award - NIH-NIA R37, National Institutes of Health, National Institute on Aging, 2000-2010 ($4,350,000)

Teaching Awards

Page 2 2003 - Stanley L. Robbins Award for Excellence in Teaching (Highest Teaching Award at Boston University School of Medicine)

2004 - Thomas Robitscher Faculty Award for Excellence in Pre-Clinical Teaching

Professional Activities

Society Memberships

1980 - Society for Neuroscience

1980 - American Association for the Advancement of Science

1983 - American Psychological Association (Divisions on Aging (20), Neuropsychology (40), and Physiological Psychology (6).

1983 - International Neuropsychological Society

1986 - Massachusetts Neuropsychological Society (President, 1994-1995)

1988 - American Aging Association

1989 - American Association of Anatomists

1991 - Disorders Society

1994 - American Heart Association (Divisions on Stroke, Hypertension and Cerebrovascular Disease)

1995 - Boston Society for Neurology and Psychiatry

2001 - American Association for Medical School Neuroscience Chairs

2012 – American Association of Aging

Committee and Board Memberships: Internal (Boston University Medical Center - past 5 years)

Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee, Boston University School of Medicine, 1986-2003

Graduate Student Committee, Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, 1992- present

Deans Committee, Edith Nourse Rogers Memorial Veterans Hospital, Bedford, MA 1998- present.

Executive Committee, Boston University School of Medicine, 1998-present

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Advisory Committee to Evaluate the Effects of Educational Pathways on Preclinical Education, 2002.

Biomedical Program in Neuroscience Steering Committee, 2002 - 2012

Academy of Advisors, Boston University School of Medicine, 2003-present

Co-Director, Program in Neuroscience, Boston University, 2003-2010

Chair, Committee on Faculty Development, 2005-2006.

Executive Committee- Center for Bioimaging

Co-Director, (Executive Committee) Spivack Center for

Search Committee - Chair of Medicine, Boston University School of Medicine, 2006

Basic Science Department Committee, Boston University School of Medicine- 2007

Executive Committee, Center for Neuroscience, Boston University School of Medicine- 2007 - present

Committee and Board Memberships: External

Medical and Scientific Advisory Boards

Medical and Scientific Advisory Committee of the Alzheimer's Disease Association of Eastern Massachusetts, 1984-1992

Scientific and Professional Affairs Committee of the International Neuropsychological Society, 1985-1986.

Advisory Board - Program Project "Fetal Protein Malnutrition and Mental Retardation: Janina R. Galler, Principal Investigator - June 1990 - 1994

President, Massachusetts Neuropsychological Society, 1994-1995

Advisory Board - NIH-NIA, REACH-TLC Program Grant, Diane Mahoney, P.I., Boston University Medical Center, 1996- 1999

President, Pine Hill Cemetery Association (Anatomical Gifts collaborative of Boston University School of. Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Tufts Medical School, and Univ. of Massachusetts Medical Center), 1999-Present.

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External Advisory Committee: NIA-NIH Intramural Program on Caloric Restriction in the Aged Monkey, Poolesville, MD, 1996-1998

Education Committee, Alzheimer's Disease Association of Eastern Massachusetts, 1997- 2003

NIH-NIA Steering Committee on Use of Primates in Research, 2001-2008

Chairman, NIH-NIA Conference on Executive Function, Bethesda, MD, November 2002

Boston Society for Neurology and Psychiatry, Executive Board, 2003 – 2010.

Chairman, Trans-NIH Workshop on Executive Function, , January 2003

Chairman, NIH-NIA Working Group on Executive Function, Bethesda, MD, 2004

Executive Committee, Boston Society for Neurology and Psychiatry 2004-present

Chairman, Stanley Cobb Assembly, Boston Society for Neurology and Psychiatry, 2006

Scientific Review Committees (last 10 years)

ALZHIEMERS ASSOCATION, Grant Review Panel Member, Chicago, IL, 1993-present

AFAR, National Scientific Advisory Council, American Federation of Aging Research, New York, 1995-present

NIH-NIA ZAG1-SRC T-32, Study Section, 2002-2005

NIH-NIA ZAG1-ZIJ-6, Clinical Research Loan Repayment Review Committee, 2002- 2005

NIH-NIMH SEP ZMH1 ERB-Y Psychostimulants, March, 2005

NIH-NINDS SEP, Contract on Executive Function, September 2005

Canadian Institutes of Health, Vascular Health and Study Section , 2005

NIH-NIA, Chairman, ZAG1 SEP Program Project on Cognitive Aging, Yale University, NIH- NIA, 2006

NIH-NCRR, Special Review Committee, NIH -National Center for Research Resources, University of Wisconsin National Primate Research Center, January, 2007

NIH-Blueprint Review Panel on Neurodegeneration, K18 ZDC1 SRB-L45, March 2007

NIH, Chairman, ZAG1 SEP on Cognitive Aging, Yale University, NIH-NIA, May, 2007

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NIH-NCRR, Special Review Committee, NIH -National Center for Research Resources, University of Wisconsin National Primate Research Center, January, 2008

NIH-NCRR, Special Review Committee, NIH -National Center for Research Resources, Southwest National Primate Research Center, July, 2008

NIH-NIA ZAG1-SRC T-32, Training Grants, National Institutes for Aging, Study Section, 2008.

NIH – Special Emphasis Review Panel, National Institute on Nursing: MCI – 2012

NIH-NCAST, Site Visit Review Team, Special Emphasis Panel (ZOD1-CO3), Oregon National Primate Research Committee, NIH-National Center for Advancing Sciences Translation, August, 2012

NIH-NCAST, Chairman, Site Visit Review Team, Special Emphasis Panel (ZOD1-CO3), Southwest National Primate Research Committee, NIH-National Center for Advancing Sciences Translation Southwest National Primate Center, San Antonio, TX August, 2013

NIH-NCAST Special Emphasis Review Panel (ZOD1-CO3), Southwest National Primate Research Committee, NIH-National Center for Advancing Sciences, Translational Southwest National Primate Center, Washington DC., November, 2013

Editorial Boards

Associate Editor - Newsletter for Division 40 (Clinical Neuropsychology) of the American Psychological Association, 1984-1995

The American Journal of Alzheimer's Disease, 1985-1995

Interdisciplinary Topics in Gerontology, 1996-present

Behavioral Neuroscience, 2005-present

Reviewer (last 3 years):

American Journal of Alzheimer Journal of Clinical and Experimental Research Neuropsychology Amyloid Journal of Comparative Neurology Behavioral Neuroscience Journal of Gerontology Cerebral Cortex Journal of Neuroscience Comparative Neurology Lancet Elsevier Press Neurobiology of Aging Experimental Neurology Neuropsychology Guilford Press Psychobiology Press Science Hippocampus

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Teaching Experience

Previous Grade 9-12 Biology/Chemistry Teacher, Massachusetts, 1969- 1970 . Special Education Teacher (Science) , Kolburne School, 1969

Undergraduate courses in Introductory Psychology, Physiological Psychology and Developmental Psychology, Department of Psychology, Northeastern University, Boston, MA, 1979-1981

Introduction to Organizational Behavior and Human Factors Engineering, Northeastern University, Boston MA, 1979-1981

Neurology of Behavior (Section on Memory), Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, 1995.

Human Neuropsychology, Graduate Division, Northeastern University, Boston, MA, 1982-1985

Medical Gross Anatomy, (GMS - AN 701) Section Director, Head and Neck, Boston University School of Medicine, 1992-present

Neuroscience (GMS - MS 703), Lectures on Neuropsychology and Neuronal Plasticity, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, MA, 1984-present

Medical Gross Anatomy, (GMS - AN 701), Course Director, Boston University School of Medicine, 2000-2003.

Neurobiology of and Memory (GMS -AN 702) Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, MA, 1990-present

Neurobiology of Aging (AN 707) Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, MA, 1990-present.

Present

Cognitive Neuroscience (Course Director)

Head & Neck Anatomy (small group sessions)

Medical Neuroscience (Two lectures)

Neurobiology of Aging (Course Co-Manager, taught biannually)

Neurobiology of Learning and Memory (Course Co-Manager, taught biannually)

Neurobiology of Aging for Residents in Psychiatry (Harvard Division on Aging)

Professional Skills-Ethics and Grant Writing

Educational Neuroscience

Program Development

2000 - Founded Clinical Neuroscience Society (CNS) at Boston University School of Medicine

2001- Developed the nationally recognized “Vesalius Program” in Teaching in the Biomedical Sciences (Graduate Program)

2003 - Selected as Carnegie Foundation Partner Department for the Initiative for the Doctorate in Neuroscience

2004 - Co-developed MA program in Mental Health & Behavioral Medicine (with Department of Psychiatry)

2005 - Developed MS program in Biomedical Forensic Sciences (with Local, State and Federal Law Enforcement and State Medical Examiners Office)

2006 - Developed MA program in Biomedical Imaging (with Department of Radiology): First in the U.S.

2008- Co-developed the MS Program in Health Emergency Management (with Department of Emergency Medicine, School of Law and School of Management: First in the U.S. Medical School)

2015–Developed the M.S. Program in Educational Neuroscience (In final approval process)

Student Advisees and Theses Committees:

Graduate Student Advisor - Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology 1992-1996

Primary Advisor, Rebecca Lee Crumpler Academy (18 Medical Students) 2003- present.

Founder-Graduate Medical Science Student Organization -GMSSO (975 students), 2004- 2010.

Faculty Advisor and Founder, Clinical Neuroscience Society (CNS), 2000-present (Medical and Graduate Students at BUSM)

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Doctoral Students

Kinan Hreib (Co-advisor) 1986-1991 Kenneth Rhodes (Co-advisor) 1988-1991 Lori Beason (Co-advisor) 1989-1994 Greg Cavanagh (Co-advisor) - 1995-1998 Tara Moore (Advisor) - 1996-2000 Anthony Swagerl (Co-advisor) - 1998-2004 Laura Welke (Advisor) - 1999-2004 Elizabeth Jonak (Advisor) - 2001-2005 Jennifer Tobin (Co-Advisor) 2002 - 2007 Steve Schettler (Advisor) 2004 - 2010 Jon Ruekemann (Advisor) 2007-2008 Donna Murray (Advisor) 2007 – 2011

MD-PhD Students

Brad Fenton (Co-advisor) 1990-1993 Tim Nicholson (Co-Advisor) - 1993-1996 John Pugh (Co-Advisor) - 1999-2003 Chad Farris (Co-Advisor) 2007-2011 Danielle Farrar (Co Advisor) 2012- present Lev Vaisman (Co-Advisor) 2012-present

Masters Students

Matt Weber (Co-advisor) - 1992 Patricia Ronald (Co-advisor) - 1992 Nicholas Lambrou (Co-advisor) - 1992 David Pugliese - (Co-advisor) - 1995 David Lambert - (Co-advisor) - 1995 Scott Albright - (Co-advisor) - 1996 Kristin Kleber - (Co-advisor) – 1999 Amy Hurwitz (Advisor) - 2000 Tanya Greenberg (Co-Advisor) - 2002

Postdoctoral Fellows

Richard Saunders (Co-advisor) - 1984-1985 Gene Blatt (Co-advisor) - 1988-1990 Ronald Killiany - (Co-advisor) - 1992-1995 Elizabeth Suki (Co-advisor) - 1997-1999 Tara Moore (Advisor) 2000-2002

Page 9 Patricia Boyle (Co-Advisor) - 2002-2003 Dawn Cisewski (Advisor) - 2003-2005 Daniel Roe (Co-Advisor) - 2003-2007

Research Interests

1) Primary research interest is the neurobiological bases of memory and learning with a focus on aging (successful and unsuccessful aging) and age-related disease (cerebrovascular disease, hypertension). Multidisciplinary approaches are used to study humans and non-human primate models, in parallel when possible. Research techniques include neurobehavioral assessment of higher cortical function, “translational” test development, neuroimaging (fMRI, DTI, MRS, spectroscopy), telemetry (blood pressure, circadian rhythm), and histologic markers of neuronal inflammation, injury and degeneration. Our translational work led to the discovery of “rapid forgetting” in Alzheimer’s disease, a characteristic of cognition that singularly dissociates the nature of memory dysfunction in AD from that of other neurodegenerative and amnestic disorders (Moss et al, 1986).

2) Recent interest in “Neuroscience of Education”: We are developing a discipline that explores the principles of and together with our growing understanding of the structure of knowledge, applies them to teaching and education across the life span (e.g., Do aged adults learn differently from the young adults or teenagers? - and if so, how does one make more efficient both learning and teaching for each).

Current Research Support

Role of Curcumin on Age-Related Cognitive Decline in the Rheus Monkey RO1 AG043478 (Moss Co-PI) NIH-NIA 4/01/2012-3/31/2017 First Year Funding: $462,300 (1st percentile ranking)

Previous Research Support

Neuropsychology and Neurobiology of Aging NIH-NIA – T32 Training Grant Mark B. Moss, P.I. 4/01/08-3/31/13 First Year Funding: $262,300

Neural Substrates of Cognitive Decline in Aging NIH-NIA- Program Project AG-00001 (Year 28) Douglas L. Rosene, P.I. Mark B. Moss, Co P.I., Core B and Project 1 Leader 5/1/-07-4/30/12 (No Cost Extension to 04/30/13)_ Initial funding year (Core B and Project 1): Direct Cost. $310,000 First Year Funding: $1, 274,000

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Neurobiological Consequences of Hypertension and Age NIH-NIA/NIHBL MERIT AWARD RO1 AG17609 Mark B. Moss, P.I. 2/1/00 – 1/31/10 First Year Funding: $404,946

Neural Substrates of Cognitive Decline in Aging NIH-NIA- Program Project AG-00001 (Year 28) Douglas L. Rosene, P.I. Mark B. Moss, Co P.I., Core B and Project 1 Leader 5/1/-84-4/30/08 Initial funding year (Core B and Project 1): Direct Cost. $310,000 First Year Funding: $1, 274,000

Memory/Executive Systems in Prefrontal and Temporal Cortex NIH-NIMH – RO1 MH06986 Mark B. Moss, P.I. 03/01/04- 2/28/09 First Year Funding $414,709

Cognition and Cerebrovascular Disease: A Primate Model NIH-NINDS - PO1 NS31649 Mark B. Moss, P.I 6/1/93-5/31/98 First Year Funding: $991,080 Total Funding $4,959,683

Role of the Basal Forebrain in Memory Function NIH-NINDS Mark B. Moss, P.I. 9/1/94-8/31/99 First Year Funding $238,000

BIBLIOGRAPHY Mark Barry Moss

Books:

1. Albert, M.S. and Moss, M.B. (Eds.). Geriatric Neuropsychology, Guilford Press, New York, 1988

Page 11

Articles and Chapters:

3. Mesulam, M-M., Hegarty, E., Barbas, H., Carson, K.A., Gower, E.C., Knapp, A.G., Moss, M.B. and Mufson, E.J. (1980) Additional factors influencing sensitivity in the tetramethyl benzidine method for HRP histochemistry. Journal of Histochemistry & Cytochemistry, 28:1255-1259.

4. Mahut, H., Moss, M.B. and Zola-Morgan, S. (1981) Retention deficits after combined amygdalo- hippocampal, entorhinal or fornix lesions. Neuropsychologia, 19:202-225. PMID:7254500

5. Moss, M.B., Mahut, H. and Zola-Morgan, S. (1981) Concurrent discrimination learning of monkeys after hippocampal, entorhinal or fornix lesions. Journal of Neuroscience, 1:227-240. PMID: 7264718

6. Mahut, H., Zola-Morgan, S. and Moss, M.B. (1982) Hippocampal resections impair associative learning and recognition memory in the monkey. Journal of Neuroscience, 2:1214-1229. PMID: 7119874

7. Weintraub, S., Mesulam, M-M., Albert, M., Auty, R., Baratz, R., Lo Castro, S., Kapust, L., Moss, M.B., Ransil, B. and Tellers, J. (1983) Lecithin in the treatment of Alzheimer's Disease: Report of a dose- ranging study in mildly impaired patients. Archives of Neurology, 40:527-528.

8. Zola-Morgan, S., Dabrowska, J., Moss, M.B. and Mahut, H. (1983) Enhanced preference for perceptual change in the monkey after section of the fornix, but not after ablations of the hippocampus. Neuropsychologia, 21:433-454. PMID: 6646398

9. Albert, M. and Moss, M.B. (1984) The assessment of memory disorders in patients with Alzheimer's disease. In: Neuropsychology of Memory. L. Squire and N. Butters (Eds.), Guilford Press, New York.

10. Mahut, H. and Moss, M.B. (1984) Consolidation of memory: The hippocampus revisited. In: Neuropsychology of Memory. L. Squire and N. Butters (Eds.), Guilford Press, New York.

11. Moss, M.B. and Rosene, D.L. (1984) A fixation-perfusion procedure for the concurrent demonstration of Timm's, HRP and AChE histochemistry. Journal of Histochemistry & Cytochemistry, 32:1113-1116.

12. Mahut, H. and Moss, M.B. (1985) Dissociation of two behavioral functions in the monkey after early hippocampal ablations. In: Plasticity, Learning and Memory. B. Will, P. Schmitt and J. Dalrymple-Alford (Eds.), Plenum Press, New York.

13. Moss, M.B. and Rosene, D.L. Neural transplantation: A panacea? Neurobiology of Aging, 6:168- 169, 1985.

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14. Mahut, H. and Moss, M.B. The monkey and the seahorse. In: The Hippocampus. R. Isaacson and K. Pribram (Eds.), Plenum Press, New York, 1986.

15. Moss, M.B., Albert, M.S., Butters, N. and Payne, M. (1986) Differential patterns of memory loss among patients with Alzheimer's Disease, Huntington's Disease and Alcoholic Korsakoff's syndrome. Archives of Neurology, 43:239-246.

16. Butters, N., Salmon, D.P., Cullum, C.M., Cairns, P., Troster, M.S., Jacobs, B.A., Moss, M.B. and Cermak, L.S. Differentiation of amnesic and demented patients with the - Revised. Clinical Neuropsychology, 2:133-148, 1988.

17. Hreib, K.K., Rosene, D.L. and Moss, M.B. Basal forebrain efferents to the medial dorsal thalamic nucleus in the rhesus monkey. Journal of Comparative Neurology, 277:365-390, 1988.

18. Moss, M.B. Research in Alzheimer's Disease: A progress report. The American Journal of Alzheimer's Care and Related Disorders and Research, 3:10-16, 1988.

19. Moss, M.B. and Albert, M.S. (1988) Future directions in the study of aging. In: Geriatric Neuropsychology. M.S. Albert and M.B. Moss (Eds.), Guilford Press, New York, 293-302.

20. Moss, M.B. and Albert, M.S. Neuropsychology of Alzheimer's disease and related disorders. In: Geriatric Neuropsychology, M.S. Albert and M.B. Moss, (Eds.), Guilford Press, New York, 145-172, 1988.

21. Moss, M.B., Rosene, D.L. and Peters, A. Effects of aging on visual recognition memory in the rhesus monkey. Neurobiology of Aging, 9:495-502, 1988.

22. Prusty, S., Kemper, T., Moss, M.B. and Hollander, W. Occurrence of stroke in a primate model of cerebrovascular disease. Stroke, 19:84-90, 1988.

23. Albert, M.S., Moss, M.B. and Milberg, W. Memory testing to improve the differential diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease. In: Alzheimer's Disease and Related Disorders. K. Iqbal, H.M. Wisniewski and B. Winblad (Eds.), Alan R. Liss, New York, 1989.

24. Moss, M.B., Saint-Hilaire, M., Feldman, R.G., Valeri, R.V. Major-Theran, C. and Durso, R. Spontaneously occurring Parkinson's Disease in a non-human primate. Neurology, 30:297, 1991.

25. Albert, M. and Moss, M.B. The assessment of memory disorders in patients with Alzheimer's disease. In: Neuropsychology of Memory. L. Squire and N. Butters (Eds.), Guilford Press, New York, 1992.

26. Au, R, White, R.F., Durso, R. and Moss, M.B. Neuropsychological function in Parkinson's disease. In: Clinical Syndromes in Neuropsychology: The Practitioner's Handbook. R.F. White (Ed.), Elsevier, Amsterdam, 1992.

Page 13 27. Diamond, R., White, R.F., Myers, R.H., Mastromauro, C., Koroshetz, W.J., Butters, N., Rothstein, D.M., Moss, M.B. and Vasterling, J. (1992) Evidence of presymptomatic cognitive decline in Huntington’s disease. Journal of Clinical Experimental Neuropsychology, 6:961-975.

28. Gendzier, R.D., White, R.F., Myers, R., Koroshetz, W., Butters, N., Vasterling, J., Rothstein, D., Moss, M.B. and Vasterling, J. (1992) Evidence of presymptomatic cognitive decline in Huntington's disease. Journal of Clinical Experimental Neuropsychology, 14:961-975.

29. Moss, M.B. and Albert, M.S. (1992) Neuropsychology of Alzheimer's disease. In: Clinical Syndromes in Neuropsychology: The Practitioner's Handbook. R.F White (Ed.), Elsevier, Amsterdam.

30. Moss, M.B., Albert, M.S. and Kemper, T.L. (1992) Neuropsychology of frontal lobe dementia. In: Clinical Syndromes in Neuropsychology: The Practitioner's Handbook. R.F. White (Ed.), Elsevier, Amsterdam.

31. Moss, M.B. and Saint-Hilaire, M. (1992) Spontaneously occurring Parkinson's disease in a non- human primate. APDA Newsletter, 3:10.

32. Hollander, W., Prusty, S., Kemper, T., Rosene, D.L. and Moss, M.B. (1993) The effects of hypertension on cerebral atherosclerosis of the cynomolgous monkey. Stroke, 24:1218-1227.

33. Killiany, R. and Moss, M.B. Memory function and autism. In: Innovations in Autism. M. Bauman and T. Kemper (Eds.). Johns Hopkins Press, Baltimore, 1993.

34. Killiany, R, Moss, M.B., Albert, M. S. , Sandor, T., Tieman, J. and Jolesz, F. Temporal lobe regions on magnetic resonance imaging identify patients with early Alzheimer's disease. Archives of Neurology, 50:949-954, 1993.

35. Moss, M.B. (1993) The longitudinal assessment of recognition memory in aged rhesus monkeys. Neurobiology of Aging, 14, 635-636.

36. Moss, M.B. (1993) Memory impairment and microinfarction in monkeys as a result of hypertension but not hypercholesterolemia. Neuroscience Facts, 8:12.

37. Moss, M.B. and Killiany, R. (1993) Neuroanatomical correlates of cognitive function. In: Psychotherapist's Guide to Neuropsychiatric Patients: Diagnostic and Treatment Issues. J. Ellison, C. Weinstein and T. Hodel-Malinofsky, (Eds.), American Psychiatric Press, NY.

38. Moss, M.B. and Rosene, D.L. (1993) Therapeutic effects of nimodipine on age-related memory dysfunction in the monkey. Drugs in Development, 2: 249-261.

39. White, R.F., Feldman, R.G., Moss, M.B. and Proctor, S.P. (1993) Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), neurobehavioral testing and toxic encephalopathy: Two cases. Environmental Research, 61:117-123.

Page 14 40. Sandor, T, Tieman, J, Ong, H.T., Moss, M.B., Jolesz, F. and Albert M. (1994) Comparison of the precision of two standardized coordinate systems for the quantification of brain anatomy. Neuroradiology, 7:499-503.

41. Killiany, R.J., Moss, M.B. and Albert, M.S. (1994) Discriminant analysis of Alzheimer's Disease: In reply. Archives of Neurology, 51:1088-1089.

42. Hyman, B.T., Reiter, J., Moss, M.B., Rosene, D.L. and Pandya, D.N. (1994) Extracellular signal- regulated kinase (MAP kinase) immunoreactivity in the rhesus monkey brain. Neuroscience Letters, 166:113-116.

43. Peters, A., Gruia-Leahu, D., Moss, M.B. and McNally, K. (1994) The effects of aging on Area 46 of the frontal cortex of the rhesus monkey. Cerebral Cortex, 6:621-635.

44. Lai, Z, Moss, M.B., Rosene, D.L., Herndon, J. and Killiany, R. (1995) Executive system dysfunction in aged monkeys: Spatial and object reversal learning. Neurobiology of Aging, 16:947-954.

45. Poduri, A., Beason-Held, L.L., Moss, M.B., Rosene, D.L. and Hyman, B.T. (1995) CA3 neuronal degeneration follows chronic entorhinal cortex lesions. Neuroscience Letters, 197:1-4.

46. Albert. M.S. and Moss, M.B. (1996) Neuropsychology of aging: Findings in humans and monkeys. In: Handbook of the Biology of Aging. E.L. Schneider and J.W. Rowe (Eds.), Academic Press, 217-233.

47. Peters, A., Rosene, D.L., Moss, M.B., Kemper, T.L., Abraham, C.R., Tigges, J. and Albert, M.S. (1996) Neurobiological bases of age-related cognitive decline in the rhesus monkey. Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology, 55:861-874.

48. Herndon, J.G., Moss, M.B., Rosene, D.L. and Killiany, R.J. (1997) Patterns of cognitive decline in aged rhesus monkeys. Behavioral Brain Research, 87:25-34.

49. Kemper, T.L., Moss, M.B., Rosene, D.L. and Killiany, R.L. (1997) Age-related neuronal loss in the nucleus centralis superior of the rhesus monkey. Acta Neuropathology, 94:124-130.

50. Killiany, R.J., Moss, M.B., Nicholson, T., Jolesz, F. and Sandor, T. (1997) An interactive procedure for extracting features of the brain from magnetic resonance images: The lobes. Mapping, 5:355-363.

51. Moss, M.B., Killiany, R.J., Lai, Z.C., Rosene, D.L. and Herndon, J. (1997) Recognition memory span in rhesus monkeys of advanced age. Neurobiology of Aging, 18:13-19.

52. Sloane, J.A., Pietropaolo, M.F., Rosene, D.L., Moss, M.B., Peters, A., Kemper, T. and Abraham, C.R. (1997) Lack of correlation between plaque burden and cognition in the aged monkey. Acta Neuropathologica, 94:471-478.

53. Guttmann, C.R.G., Jolesz, F. A., Kikinis, R., Killiany, R. J., Moss, M.B., Sandor, T. and Albert, M.S. (1998) White matter difference with age. Neurology, 50:972-978.

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54. Herndon, J.G., Constantinidis, I. and Moss, M.B. (1998) Biochemical differences between young and old rhesus monkeys as detected by magnetic resonance spectroscopy. NeuroReport, 9:2127- 2130.

55. Lacreuse, A., Herndon, J.G. and Moss, M.B. (1998) Vieillissement des fonctions cognitives chez l'homme et le macaque rhésus (Macaca mulatta). Primatologie, 1:333-377.

56. Peters, A. Sethares, C. and Moss, M.B. (1998) The effects of aging on Layer 1 in area 46 of prefrontal cortex in the rhesus monkey. Cerebral Cortex, 8:671-684.

57. Albert, M.S. and Moss, M.B. (1999) Early features of Alzheimer’s disease. In: Cerebral Cortex, Volume 14. Neurodegenerative and Age-Related Changes in Structure and Function of Cerebral Cortex. A. Peters and J. Morrison (Eds.), Plenum Press, New York.

58. Albert, M.S. and Moss, M.B. (1999) Profiles of normal aging. In: Cerebral Cortex. Volume 14. Neurodegenerative and Age-Related Changes in Structure and Function of Cerebral Cortex. A. Peters and J. Morrison (Eds.), Plenum Press, New York.

59. Beason-Held, L., Rosene, D.L., Killiany, R.J. and Moss, M.B. (1999) Hippocampal ibotenic acid lesions produce memory deficits in the rhesus monkey. Hippocampus, 9:562-574.

60. Kemper, T.L., Moss, M.B., Hollander, W. and Prusty, S. (1999) Microinfarction as a result of hypertension in a primate model of cerebrovascular disease. Acta Neuropathologica, (Berl). 98:295- 303.

61. Lacreuse, A., Herndon, J.G., Killiany, R.J., Rosene, D.L. and M.B. Moss. (1999) Spatial cognition in rhesus monkeys: male superiority declines with age. Hormones and Behavior, 36:70-76.

62 Moss, M.B. (1999) A primate model of hypertensive cerebrovascular disease. In: Innovative Animal Models of CNS Diseases: From Molecule to Therapy. D.F. Emerich and E.L. Dean (Eds.), Humana Press, Totowa, New Jersey.

63. Moss, M.B. (1999) Neurobiological basis of cognitive decline in the aged monkey. In: Innovative Animal Models of CNS Diseases: From Molecule to Therapy. D.F. Emerich and E.L. Dean (Eds.), Humana Press, Totowa, New Jersey.

64. Moss, M.B., Killiany, R.J. and J. Herndon. (1999) Neural bases of cognitive decline in aged rhesus monkeys. In: Cerebral Cortex, Volume 14, Neurodegenerative and Age-Related Changes in Structure and Function of Cerebral Cortex. A. Peters and J. Morrison (Eds), Plenum Press, New York.

65. Sloane, J.A., Hollander, W., Moss, M.B., Rosene, D.L. and Abraham, C.R. (1999) Increased microglial activation and protein nitration in white matter of the aging monkey. Neurobiology of Aging, 20:395-405.

Page 16 66. Herndon, J.G., Lacreuse, A., Ladinsky, E., Rosene, D.L., and Moss, M.B. (1999) Age-related decline in DHEAS is not related to cognitive impairment in aged monkeys. Neuroport, 10:3507-11.

67. Bartolak-Suki, E., Sipe, J.D., Fine, R.E., Rosene, D.L. and M.B. Moss. (2000) Serum Amyloid A is present in capillaries and microinfarcts of hypertensive monkey brain. Amyloid 7:111-117.

68. Killiany, R.J., Gomez-Isla, T., Hyman, B.T., Moss, M.B., Kikinis, R., Jolesz, F. Sandor, T. and Albert, M.S. (2000) Use of structural MRI to predict who will get Alzheimer’s Disease. Annals of Neurology, 47: 430-439.

69. Killiany, R.J., Moss, M.B., Rosene, D.I. and Herndon, J. (2000) Recognition memory function in early senescent rhesus monkeys. Psychobiology, 28:45-56.

70. Lacreuse, A., Herndon, J.G. and Moss, M.B. (2000) Cognitive function in aged ovariectomized female rhesus monkeys. Behavioral Neuroscience, 114:506-13.

71. Moss, M.B. (2000) Neurobiologic basis of cognitive decline in normal aging and hypertensive cerebrovascular disease. CNS Drug Reviews, 6:5-6.

72. Peters, A., Moss, M.B. and Sethares, C. (2000) The effects of aging on myelinated nerve fibers in monkey primary visual cortex. Journal of Comparative Neurology, 419:364-76.

73. Sloane, J.A., Kemper, T., Moss, M.B., Rosene, D.L. and Abraham, C.R. (2000) Astrocytic hypertrophy and altered GFAP degradation with age in subcortical white matter of the rhesus monkey. Brain Res., in press. Brain Research, 862:1-10.

74. Albert, M.S. and Moss, M.B. (2001) Neuropsychological approaches to preclinical identifications of Alzheimer’s Disease. In: Neuropsychology of Memory, Third Edition. (L. Squire and D. Schacter, (Eds.), Guilford Press, New York.

75. Albert, M.S., Moss, M.B., Tanzi, R and Jones, K. (2001) Preclinical prediction of AD using neuropsychological tests. Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society, 7:631-639.

76. Kemper, T.L, Blatt, G.J., Killiany, R.J. and Moss, M.B. (2001) Neuropathology of progressive cognitive decline in chronically hypertensive monkeys. Acta Neuropathologica, 101:145-153.

77. Peters, A., Moss, M.B. and Sethares, C. (2001) The effects of aging on Layer 1 of primary visual cortex in the rhesus monkey. Cerebral Cortex, 11:93-103.

78. Killiany RJ, Hyman BT, Gomez-Isla T, Moss MB, Kikinis R, Jolesz F, Tanzi R, Jones K, Albert MS. (2002) MRI measures of entorhinal cortex vs. hippocampus in preclinical AD. Neurology. 58:1188-96.

79. Moore, T.L., Killiany R.J, Rosene, D.L., Prusty, S., Hollander, W. and Moss, M.B. (2002) Impairment of Executive Function Induced by Hypertension in the Rhesus Monkey. Behavioral Neuroscience, 16:3, 387-396.

Page 17 80. Moore, T.L., Killiany, R.J., Herndon, J.G., Rosene, D.L., and Moss, M.B. (2002) Impairment in abstraction and set shifting in aged rhesus monkey. Neurobiology of Aging, 24:125-134. PMID: 12049319

81. Rehbein, L and Moss, M.B. (2002) Exploration of three modes of spatial cognition in the monkey. Psicologica, 23:139-163.

82. Zhdanova, I.V., Rosene, D.L. and Moss, M.B. (2002) Melatonin promotes sleep in three species of diurnal non-human primates. Physiology and Behavior, 75:523-529. PMID:12062316

83. Moore TL, Killiany RJ, Rosene DL, Prusty S, Hollander W, Moss. Hypertension-induced changes in monoamine receptors in the prefrontal cortex of rhesus monkeys. Neuroscience, 20:177-89, 2003 PMID: 12493558

84. Rollinson DC, Rathlev NK, Moss M, Killiany R, Sassower KC, Auerbach S, Fish SS. (2003) The effects of consecutive night shifts on neuropsychological performance of interns in the emergency department: a pilot study. Ann Emerg Med. 41:400-6. PMID:12605209

85. McDannold, N., Moss, M.B., Killiany, R., Rosene, D.L., King, R.L, Jolesz, F.A. and Hynynen, K. (2003) MRI-guided focused ultrasound surgery in the brain: Tests in a primate model. Magnetic Resonance Medicine, 49:1188-1191. PMID:12768598

86. Fukumoto H, Rosene DL, Moss MB, Raju S, Hyman BT, Irizarry MC. (2004) Beta-secretase activity increases with aging in human, monkey, and mouse brain. American Journal of Pathology 164:719-25. PMID: 14742275

87. Moss, M.B and Jonak, E. (2004) Effects of Hypertension in Young Adult and Middle Aged Rhesus Monkeys In: Vascular Dementia: Cerebrovascular Mechanisms and Clinical Management, R. Paul, R. Cohen and B. Ott Eds. Humana Press.

88. Lacreuse, A, Kim, CB, Rosene, DL, Killiany, RJ, Moss, MB, Moore, TL, Chennareddi, L, and Herndon, JG, (2005) Sex, age, and training modulate spatial memory in the Rhesus monkey (Macaca mulatta). Behavioral Neuroscience, 119:118-126. PMID:15727518

89. Albert, M.S., Moss, M.B., Tanzi, R., Blacker, D. and McArdle, J.J. (2005) Relationship of neuropsychological performance to functional ability in mild cognitive impairment, Archives of Neurology , 27 212-218.

90. Moore, TL, Schettler, SP, Killiany, RJ, Herndon, HG, Luebke, JI, Moss, MB and Rosene, DL. (2005). Cognitive impairment in aged rhesus monkeys associated with monoamine receptors. Behavioral Brain Research, 27.14-24. PMID 15863218

91. Moss, M.B. (2005) The Seahorse Comes of Age: Commentary: Behavioral Neuroscience, 120:21-23. PMID: 16187845

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92. Moore, TL, Killiany, RJ, Herndon, JG, Rosene, DL and Moss, MB (2005) A non-human primate test of abstraction and set shifting: an automated adaptation of the Wisconsin card sorting test. Journal of Neuroscience Methods, 146:165-173. PMID:16054506

93. Moore, T.L., Killiany, R.J., Herndon, J.G., Rosene, D.L. and Moss, M.B. (2006) Executive system dysfunction occurs as early as middle-age in the rhesus monkey. Neurobiology of Aging, 10:1484-1493. PMID: 16183172

94. Makris N, Papadimitriou GM, van der Kouwe A, Kennedy DN, Hodge SM, Dale AM, Benner T, Wald LL, Wu O, Tuch DS, Caviness VS, Moore TL, Killiany RJ, Moss MB, Rosene DL. (2007). Frontal connections and cognitive changes in normal aging rhesus monkeys: a DTI study. Neurobiology of Aging, 28:1556-67. E-pub. PMID: 16962214

95. Moss MB, Jonak E.Cerebrovascular disease and dementia: A primate model of hypertension and cognition. Alzheimers Dement. 2007 Apr;3(2 Suppl):S6-15. doi: 10.1016/j.jalz.2007.01.002. PMID 19595977

96. Albert M, Blacker D, Moss MB, Tanzi R, McArdle JJ. (2007). Longitudinal change in cognitive performance among individuals with mild cognitive impairment. Neuropsychoogy, 21:158-69. PMID: 17402816

97. Blacker, D. Lee, H. Tanzi, R, McArdle, J, Moss, M.B. and Albert, M.S. (2007) Neuropsychological measures in normal individuals that predict subsequent cognitive decline, Archives of Neurology, 64:862-71. PMID: 17562935

98. Moss, M.B., Rehbein, L. and Killiany, R.J. (2007) Allocentric and egocentric spatial function in the rhesus monkey. In: Spatial and spatial cognition F. Dollins (ed.) Cambridge University Press.

99. Moss, M.B., Moore, T.L., Schettler, S.P., R.J. Killiany, D.L. Rosene (2007) Successful vs. Unsuccessful Aging in a Non-Human Primate Model of Normal Aging. In: Brain Aging: Models, Methods and Mechanisms (D. Riddle, Ed) CRC Press. PMID: 21204342

100. Moss, M.B and Jonak, E.J. (2007) Cerebrovascular Disease and Dementia—A Primate Model of Hypertension and Cognition. Alzheimer’s & Dementia, The Journal of the Alzheimer’s Association 3: S6- S15.

101. Wisco, J.J, R.J Killiany, C. R. Guttman, S.K. Warfield, M.B. Moss and D.L Rosene. (2007) An MRI study of age-related white and gray matter volume changes in the rhesus monkey. Neurobiology of Aging, 1563-75. PMID: 17459528

102. Wisco JJ, Rosene DL, Killiany RJ, Moss MB, Warfield SK, Egorova S, Wu Y, Liptak Z, Warner J, Guttmann CR. (2008) A rhesus monkey reference label atlas for template driven segmentation. Journal of Medical Primatology, Epub, 250-60. PMID: 18466282

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103. Moore TL, Schettler, SP, Killiany RJ, Rosene DL, Moss MB (2009) Effects on executive function following damage to the prefrontal cortex in the rhesus monkey (Macaca mulatta) Behavioral Neuroscience 123:231-241. PMID 199331446.

104. Moss, M.B., Rehbein, L. and Killiany, R.J. (2010) Allocentric and egocentric spatial function in the rhesus monkey. In: Spatial perception and spatial cognition F. Dollins (ed.) Cambridge University Press.

105. Moore TL, Killiany RJ, Pessina MA, Moss MB, Rosene DL.Assessment of motor function of the hand in the aged rhesus monkey. Somatosens Mot Res. 2010;27(3):121-30. doi: 10.3109/08990220.2010.485963 PMID: 20653499

106. Peters A, Sethares C, Moss MB,How the fornix is affected by age, J Comp Neurol. 2010 Oct 1;518(19):3962-80. doi: 10.1002/cne.22434.PMID:20737595

107. Moore, T.L, RJ Killiany, MA Pessina, MB Moss, SP Finklestein, Douglas L Rosene. (2012) Recovery from ischemia in the middle-aged brain: a non-human primate model Neurobiology of Aging,33:619-624.

108. Moore, TL, Schettler, SP, Killiany, RJ, Moss, M.B. and Rosene, DL. Impairment in Delayed Non- Matching following lesions of dorsal prefrontal cortex in the Rhesus monkey. Behavioral Neuroscience, 2012 Dec;126(6):772-80. doi: 10.1037/a0030493. Epub 2012 Oct 22 .PMID:23088539

109. Moore TL1 Killiany RJ, Pessina MA, Moss MB, Finklestein SP, Rosene DL. Recovery from ischemia in the middle-aged brain: a nonhuman primate model, Neurobiol Aging. 2012 Mar;33(3):619.e9-619.e24. doi: 10.1016/j.neurobiolaging.2011.02.005. Epub 2011 Apr 1. PMID: 21458887

110.Franzblau F, Broitman, S, Moss, M, Traish, A and Romney C. (2013) Success of a pre-medical master’s degree program in preparing students for medical careers. Pocedia Social and Behavioral Sciences 93: 405-414.

111. Fried PJ, Rushmore RJ 3rd, Moss MB, Valero-Cabré A, Pascual-Leone A, Causal evidence supporting functional dissociation of verbal and spatial working memory in the human dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. Eur J Neurosci. 2014 Jun;39(11):1973-81. doi: 10.1111/ejn. Epub 2014 Apr 9 PMID: 24713032

Page 20 Cognitive Test Development: (Open source free to all investigators)

Delayed Recognition Span Test: Moss, M.B., 1984: A short-term memory task designed to assess recognition span for four different classes of stimuli (verbal, spatial, facial and color) including a delayed recall condition to assess rate of forgetting. The test has been recommended by the HHS Task Force on Alzheimer's Disease (Joint Report of the NINCDS and ADRDA, July, 1984) as part of the battery for the assessment of Alzheimer's Disease and related disorders and has been adapted for use by the Multicenter Parkinson's Study Group for the assessment of spatial memory in patients with Parkinson's Disease.

Categorical Set-Shifting Task: Moore, T.L., Killiany, R.J, Rosene, D.L., and Moss, M.B, 2002: An adaptation of the Wisconsin Card Sort Task to assess executive function in non-human primate models. The task uses the same stimuli as those for the WCST and can be administered using a computerized format.

Invited Talks, Symposia and Workshops (past 6 years)

Successful and Unsuccessful Aging, Mini-Med School, Boston University School of Medicine, March 30, 2004.

Neuropsychology of Aging and Dementia: Harvard Medical School Division on Aging Geriatric Fellows Summer Seminar Series. Hebrew Rehabilitation Hospital, Boston, MA July 8, 2004.

Aging Without Dementia in Animal Models. Assessing Cognition for Emerging Therapeutics in AD, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine. Baltimore, MD, September 14, 2004

Patterns of Aging: Harvard Medical School Division on Aging Geriatric Fellows Summer Seminar Series. Hebrew Rehabilitation Hospital, Boston, MA, September 4, 2005.

CDC/Alzheimer’s Association: The Healthy Brain and our Aging Population: Translating Science to Public Health Practice, “Cerebrovascular Disease and Dementia—A Primate Model of Hypertension and Cognition”, Atlanta Georgia, May 2, 2006.

NINDS Workshop – Cell Biology of Vascular Cognitive Impairment, “A Non-Human Primate Model of Cerebrovascular Hypertension”, Arlington, Virginia, June 2, 2006.

National Institutes on Health, Meeting on Planning Randomized Clinical Trials, “Application of Dynamic Modeling and Animal Models” (Participation of FDA and Pharmaceutical Companies) Washington DC, September, 2007.

Neuropsychology of Aging and Dementia: Harvard Medical School Division on Aging Geriatric Fellows Summer Seminar Series. Hebrew Rehabilitation Hospital, Boston, MA September 8, 2007.

National Institute on Aging, NIH - “Effects of Hypertension on Brain Integrity and Cognition”, Co- Morbidity in Aging Conference, Bethesda MD, October, 2007.

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NIA-McKnight Foundation, “Neurobiology of Aging in a Non-Human Primate Model” , Summit on Cognitive Aging (Subgroup Leader), Washington DC, October, 2007

Board of Visitors of Boston University, “Successful and Unsuccessful Aging”, Boston, MA November 7, 2007.

“Comorbidity in Aging: Additive or Synergistic Effects on Cognition?” Annual Workshop of the Alzheimer’s Association of Massachusetts, Marlboro, MA, May 12, 2008.

Grand Rounds, Department of Neurology, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston MA. “Interaction of Prefrontal Cortex and Medial Temporal Lobe Structures in Subserving Memory and Executive Function”, November 12, 2008

“Successful vs. Unsuccessful Aging: Studies in Human and Non-Human Primates”. Program in Neuroscience, Northwestern University, December 10, 2008.

“Successful Aging: A Road Less Travelled?” Baycrest Centre, University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada, January 19, 2009

“Patterns of Aging” Harvard Medical School Division on Aging Geriatric Fellows Summer Seminar Series. Hebrew Rehabilitation Hospital, Boston, MA, September 4, 2009.

“Neurobiology and Neuropsychology of Normal Aging” Overview Opening Presentation, New Perspectives in the Translational Neuroscience of Late-Life Mental Disorders, NIMH Workshop, Bethesda, MD, February 2-3, 2009.

“Biological Parameters of Late-life Mental Illness – Discussant”, New Perspectives in the Translational Neuroscience of Late-Life Mental Disorders, NIMH Workshop, Bethesda, MD, February 2-3, 2009.

Patterns of Aging: Harvard Medical School Division on Aging Geriatric Fellows Summer Seminar Series. Hebrew Rehabilitation Hospital, Boston, MA, September 4, 2010.

“What Have We Learned About the Aging Brain?: A New Perspective” – Keynote Speaker, Symposium on the Aging Primate Brain-A Multi-System Approach, Wake Forest University Primate Center, June 9th, 2011, Winston-Salem, NC

Use of the Chimpanzee in Biomedical Research. Scientific and public panel presentation – Institute of Medicine, Washington, D.C. , August 11, 2011

Neurobiology of Aging, Harvard Medical School Division on Aging Geriatric Fellows Summer Seminar Series. Hebrew Rehabilitation Hospital, Boston, MA, September 4, 2011.

“What Have We Learned About the Aging Brain?: A New Perspective” – Harvard University, May, 2012, Cambridge, MA.

Page 22 Neurobiology of Aging: A New Perspective. Pfizer Neuroscience, Cambridge, MA, November 13, 2012

“Patterns of Aging” Harvard Medical School Division on Aging Geriatric Fellows Summer Seminar Series. Hebrew Rehabilitation Hospital, Boston, MA, August 31, 2014.

Workshops:

“Successful Aging, Cognition and Nutrition”, 2012, Institute for Brain Potential, Palo Alto, CA

“Understanding the Frontal Lobes” , Emotional Regulation, Social Intelligence and Motivation, 2013, Institute for Brain Potential, Haddonfield NJ

“Successful Aging, Avoiding the Landmines”, 2014, Port Charlotte, FL

“Memory: How It Works, How It Breaks Down and How to Improve It” 2015, Institute for Brain Potential, Palo Alto, CA

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