Amanda Garcia nailed her comprehensive exams and is now ABD. She's off to greatness in Amsterdam this week for the Neurobiology of Language conference. Congratulations Amanda!
If there's any potable drinking water in Toledo that is....
Addendum to previous post
Farewell to Jamie Yingst
We bid a fond farewell to Jamie Yingst. Jamie is off to Ohio to start his PhD in Social Cognition/Psychology at the University of Toledo. Good luck, Jamie!
Kudos to our film consultant, Brian McDermott
Our film consultant, Brian McDermott, MFA, MSW, was just invited to present his own original documentary film (Language Healers) at the CoLang conference held at the University of Texas Arlington. Here's Brian waxing philosophical in front of a crowd of bloodthirsty linguists.
Language Healers is an amazing documentary focused on language revitalization efforts among several Native American tribes. Language Healers has been making the rounds on the international film festival circuit for the last year. Brian's been killing it!
Neurobiology of Language Conference: Huzzah for Amanda Garcia
Our PhD student, Amanda Garcia, had a paper accepted to the NLC conference in Amsterdam. This was fascinating work examining lexical acquisition and lexical access for words acquired at different points across the lifespan (e.g., learning object names and proper nouns like slinky, flashdrive, 8-track, Elvis and Katy Perry). Amanda also won one of the society's coveted travel fellowships. She's an awesome scholar, and we could not be more proud. Go Amanda!
Welcome to our new postdoctoral fellow
Welcome, Dr. Richard Binney. Richard is an awesome addition to the lab. He completed his PhD with Matthew Lambon Ralph and the monstrously productive Manchester semantics group. I am humbled to have Richard join us, although he didn't seem to care that I like Joy Division.
Upcoming article in Frontiers in Psychology
Our abstract-concrete word topography article was just accepted to a special issue of the journal, Frontiers in Psychology. DOI and linking information to come! Congratulations to first author, Joshua Troche.
A kazillion hours of work has come to fruition
I'm proud to report that our lesion mapping paper was accepted to Cognitive Neuropsychology yesterday. This was a beast of a semantics paper that took years to refine. My PhD student is convinced that this is the last paper I will ever write. She might be right.
Coming soon.... the most interesting man in the world
New lab logo
18 degrees here makes for a morning sequestered with Adobe Illustrator. Here's a mockup of a new logo for the lab
All hail the conquering phd students
Congratulations to two of our phd students, Joshua Troche and Jinyi Hung. These young(ish) scholars successfully passed their qualifying examinations last week. They are now considered All But Dissertation (ABD). For non-doctoral types, ABD is a status metaphorically akin to 'no man's land' in the trench warfare of WWI.
Seeking new volunteers in the Temple lab
The Memory, Concepts, and Cognition Laboratory is seeking new volunteers at Temple University. If you've got the moxy*, please contact Jamie Reilly.
*in addition to "moxy", we require six hours a week in the lab. Excellent organizational skills and computer programming ability are also considered components of moxy.
In Philadelphia
I have officially moved to Philadelphia. The lab will exist simultaneously at UF and Temple University over the next couple of years.
Philadelphia Semantics Society--- First Meeting
Looks like we have our first meeting scheduled for the Philadelphia Semantics Society. It will be at my house on Thursday, January 23 at 530pm. If you are interested in attending please RSVP me at reillyj@temple.edu
Support Group Minutes
Below are the minutes from our monthly caregiver support group meeting. Meetings are free and open to the public. For more information click on the "Support Group" link.
FTD Support Group
Meeting Minutes- July 23, 2013
Announcement: Is there interest in the group having a guest speaker come talk about a new drug trial on tau? Tau Rx company wants to come chat. In the past, there have only a few clinical trials at Jax Mayo and USF. Previous trials have had some issues, hope with this for the future. (Consensus was yes, there is an interest).
Welcome to Dr. Dody
- Director of UF Memory Disorders Clinic
- Patients come to office, do an evaluation, send report to home physician to follow-up
- She is leaving a hard copy of AD Education Manual for the group to use. It will be located in the UF Cognition and Language Lab.
- Shared important resources, especially online and local
- Alz Place- adult day health care for people with progressive dementia; highly recommended by Dr. Dody
- Shared resources for disaster relief, especially during hurricane season. Know which shelters provide accommodations for people with dementia
- Checklist for family matters – bills, power of attorney, etc.
- Have a family gathering with those that you trust
Question- how do navigate the SSI before FTD patient is normal retirement age?
First, must assume that your initial application will be rejected. Find out who your case manager is and meet with them about what is required on the application form. Give what you think are ridiculous examples, i.e. a company would have to hire two people to ensure that the job could be done with the person with FTD.
Can also get a good attorney who will help with wording. Dr. Dody can also offer help if you want to run a paragraph by her.
FTD is a special exempt condition that can get SSI 5 years before AD
FTLD Review
- Early symptoms- loss of boundaries or self-awareness (anosognosia)
Question- how to deal with that as a caregiver?
Know ahead of time when things might come up and keep an arsenal of distractors (i.e when at home- wrapped snacks, going outside, inside activity; when out in the community- pictures to spark convos to allow the emotion to calm down), bring objects to allow her to squeeze and do exercises, get patient to help the caregiver, spark conversation with old family stories
Things that increase fatigue factor can make things worse
Driving is a major point of contention
- Doctor can revoke license
- Make the car unusable
- Can report anonymously to DOT tip line
- Make paper copy to include in medical record of physician’s record
Question- how to find a good primary doctor that understands and believes the problem?
Suggestions: Dr. William Rios, Dr. Alan Goldblatt
Question- when trying to find the right word, when as the caretaker to intervene?
Difficult to balance. Whatever system works with your family that keeps the family happy.
- Exercise- research has found that walking is one of the best exercises for the brain
- Biking, resistance training, gravity weight-bearing exercise also good
- 30-40 minutes 5 days/week
- Important to stay hydrated, lots of fruits and veggies
- Reduce negative stress
- Constant release of cortisol can dampen areas of short term memory and longer term storage
- Indulgent activities- especially for caregivers that are just for themselves to distract them for awhile
Question: correlation between FTD and night horrors?
Sleep does change with some people with FTD, and some meds should not be taken at bedtime (i.e. airicept should be taken in the morning after breakfast). Avoid fats and carbs late at night because sleep quality will be inferior. Sometimes there’s something in the room that can be bothersome when waking. Its also important to start winding down in the evening by avoiding stimulants (caffeine), watching the news, arguing, stimulating tv programs, no pets in the room.
Next month: Clinical trials speaker. Meet again at Milhopper library at 3pm. Date set for Tuesday, August 20th.
Revise & resubmit for our lesion mapping paper
Pretty darn good news on the whole...
Is this covered under warranty?
One wonders if spilling an entire can of Chunky soup into the front vents of my computer voids its warranty. Two positives --- the computer fan seems awesomely quiet now, and my office smells delicious. Dude, it's a Dell!
Bar association - legal woes?
Google Analytics notes a hit on our website from the American Bar Association. My first thought is that someone out there is going to sue me. If this is the case, I must make that party aware of two things: 1) I might be innocent; 2) I am not the kind of doctor who makes any money.
New article on abstract words in Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
We recently co-authored an article on the semantic clustering attributes of abstract words in the journal, Frontiers in Human Neuroscience. Sebastian Crutch at University College London is the first author. There's something for everyone in this article -- mystery, suspense, murder, math, fine British sensibility... you name it.
Authors and the dissolution of language in Alzheimer's Disease
A number of my very favorite authors have been impacted by Alzheimer's Disease or associated disease variants. Gabriel Garcia Marquez, W. Somerset Maugham, and Terry Pratchett are among the most prominent that come to mind. Dr. Peter Garrard wrote a brilliant article pubmed link here on the dissolution of narrative in the work of Dame Iris Murdoch, a renowned British author. As I revisit Dr. Garrard's work, I wonder if world class expertise in writing (or other creative pursuits) would respond uniquely to cognitive treatment or require a tailored approach. We have been working on a treatment targeting lexical preservation in progressive conditions like these (e.g., progressive nonfluent aphasia, semantic dementia). I wonder how this approach would work among high level writers -- perhaps pairing behavioral treatment with an acetylcholinesterase inhibitor. Email if you have any thoughts on this.