This award honors the contributions of Dr. Laird Cermak and recognizes the impact he has had in the area of memory and memory disorders. The prize is awarded at the Society’s Annual and Mid-Year Meetings for the best research presented in the area of memory or memory disorders. The recipient is selected at the discretion of each Program Chair. No formal application is necessary.
* Award recipients receive an honorarium of $500 USD.
INS 50th Annual Meeting
New Orleans, Virtual Meeting – February 2-4, 2022
Diabetes mellitus is associated with decreased memory functioning and changes in brain structure such as white matter disease and hippocampal atrophy. The link between diabetes and memory functioning may be modifiable and dependent on both clinical and self-management of blood glucose levels. Environmental factors such as adverse neighborhood factors may pose barriers and limit access to diabetes care and control of blood glucose.
INS 2021 Mid-Year Meeting
Melbourne, Australia – June 30 – July 3, 2021
“The experience and acceptability of smartphone reminder app training for people with acquired brain injury: a mixed methods study” (La Trobe, AUS)
INS 49th Annual Meeting
San Diego, Virtual Meeting – February 2-5, 2021
We replicated an important finding from the literature with non-Hispanic White young adults, namely that EAM tends to be described mostly with episodic details. From a feasibility standpoint, our findings suggest that we can conduct the Autobiographical Interview in bilingual Hispanics in both English and Spanish. Future directions include recruiting older monolingual and bilingual Hispanics to examine the relationship between age and EAM specificity among this population. Given the present findings, there is ample opportunity to observe age-related decline in EAM episodic specificity.
INS 48th Annual Meeting
Denver, Colorado, USA – February 5-8, 2020
Most cross-sectional studies have not found strong relationships between β-amyloid burden and memory in normal elderly, possibly because many memory tests do not specifically target the core consolidation deficits associated with Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Memory consolidation occurs over extended periods of time (days to weeks), suggesting that relatively short (≤30 minutes) delays may not be sensitive to early AD. We hypothesized that β-amyloid burden—a hallmark feature of AD—would relate to worse memory performance following an extended 1-week delay period in clinically normal adults, but not following delays ≤30 minutes.
INS 2019 Mid-Year Meeting
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil – July 10-12, 2019
Everyday memory deficits after stroke typically involve problems in associating different stimuli, such as faces and names. Therefore, Mnemonic Strategy Training (MST) could reduce the impact of these deficits in this group of patients. The goal of the present study was to investigate the far and near-transfer effects of MST in patients with Chronic Left Ischemic Stroke patients (CLIS).
INS 2019 Annual Meeting
New York City, USA – February 20-23, 2019
While research on sleep and cognition has largely focused on mean values of sleep measured across multiple nights, few studies have examined the potentially negative effects of night-to-night variability in sleep quality on brain function. The purpose of this study was to determine the relationship between variability in sleep quality and spatial learning and memory in young adults. We hypothesized that greater intraindividual sleep efficiency variability (SEv) would predict poorer spatial learning and recall performance.
INS 2018 Mid-Year Meeting
Prague, Czech Republic – July 18-20, 2018
Efforts are being made to identify dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB), the second commonest cause of neurodegenerative dementia after Alzheimer’s disease (AD), in the Mild Cognitive Impairment phase (MCI-LB), during which intervention on the disease processes would likely be most successful. Few studies have targeted this group and the cognitive profile of prodromal DLB is therefore unclear. The present study aims to elucidate the neuropsychology of DLB in the MCI phase (MCI-LB) relative to MCI due to AD (MCI-AD) and healthy controls.
INS 46th Annual Meeting
Washington, D.C, USA – February 14-17, 2018
MRI-negative temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) may be a distinct syndrome from TLE with mesial temporal sclerosis (MTS). Common imaging and neuropsychological features of TLE with MTS are well known; yet, distinguishing features in MRI-negative TLE are only beginning to be described. This study aims to identify quantitative MRI markers of memory impairment in MRI-negative TLE.
INS 2017 Mid-Year Meeting
Cape Town, South Africa – July 5-8, 2017
The diagnosis of mild cognitive impairment (MCI) in older adults at risk for Alzheimer’s disease is based on perceived and objective memory decline. It is still unclear whether older adults with MCI retain sufficient meta-awareness to evaluate their own memory capacities accurately. All previous studies addressing meta-awareness in MCI used cross-sectional designs. This study aimed at investigating the association between the evolution of objective and subjective memory in a longitudinal clinical trial. Forty-one participants with MCI were enrolled in a randomized-controlled trial comparing two non-pharmacological interventions, one based on mindfulness, the other on psychoeducation about memory in aging.
To evaluate the efficacy of mnemonic strategy training (MST) versus an active education control program (EP) in patients with amnestic mild cognitive impairment (aMCI).
Best Submission In Memory Or Memory Disorders
Accumulating evidence suggests that inflammatory processes play a role in Alzheimer’s Disease (AD). Despite this established association, little is known about how inflammation-related genes relate to memory function in the earliest stages of pathogenesis. We hypothesized that pro- and anti-inflammatory single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) would independently predict memory function in Mild Cognitive Impairment.
The current study examined in musicians and nonmusicians the possibility of a subsidiary tonal system, in addition to the phonological loop and visuospatial sketchpad, for processing musical information within Baddeley’s multicomponent working memory model.
It has been suggested that objects are maintained as integrated units in working memory and when forgotten they are lost as a whole, without leaving any trace. To study the relevance of this claim to real-life situations, we investigated how object-location information is remembered – and forgotten.
Presented for the Best Submission in Memory Research
Source Memory and Generation Effects in Parkinson’s Disease
Presented for the Best Submission in Memory Research
Relational and Conjunctive Working Memory Binding across Age
Feature Binding in Memory: A comparison of “what, where and when” in young and older adults
My study systematically compare age-related decline in item/context memory for single features with context memory for multiple features (in which information has to be integrated). The results showed an overall context-memory deficit for spatial and temporal information rather than a specific binding deficit in older adults.
INS 30th Annual Meeting
Toronto, Canada – February 13-16, 2002
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