
Jenna Adams
@jennanadams
Assistant Research Prof @UCIrvine • Postdoc @YassaLab • PhD Jagust Lab @UCBerkeleyNeuro • Alzheimer’s disease, memory, & neuroimaging 🧠
ID: 1169045652145225728
04-09-2019 00:35:47
475 Tweet
896 Followers
385 Following


It's out! The Hippocampal Subfield Group (Hippocampal Subfield Group @hipposubfields on bsky) led by Anika Wuestefeld, PhD and Hannah Baumeister have published an important paper describing cytoarchitectonic definitions of medial temporal lobe cortex subregions, including regions involved in #AlzheimersDisease


1/ Now out in Nature Communications with Andrea Luppi: our systematic evaluation of fMRI pipelines for functional connectomics! Wondering how to pick from the hundreds of unique pipelines when applying network neuroscience methods to your data? Find out here: rdcu.be/dJSsw


New preprint is out 🔔! Excited to share our new findings on the interplay of neuroinflammation, cerebrovascular injury, and amyloid-beta. Check out how this cascade has implications for memory deficits in older adults. Huge thanks to Mike Yassa, Jenna Adams, and #BethThomas

We are thrilled to finally share our newest paper led by Dr. Kelsey Canada & Negar Mazloum, with senior authors Rosanna Olsen & Ana M Daugherty! We provide guidance on quality control and reporting practices for hippocampal subfields. 🫶🏻🧠 Link: onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/hb…


Mike Yassa Jenna Adams SfN Journals 7/ To confirm, a voxel-wise analysis revealed that basal frontotemporal Aβ strongly related to temporal mnemonic discrimination deficits, reinforcing our hypothesis and these areas largely mirror the first areas the develop Aβ deposition, as described by Braak & Braak.


🚨 New publication led by the talented Casey Vanderlip, who I had the privilege of mentoring on this project! We show that Aβ deposition, particularly in basal frontotemporal cortex, is associated with specific deficits in temporal mnemonic discrimination. More details below!

#JNeurosci | Casey Vanderlip Jenna Adams et al. found that a biomarker for #AlzheimersDisease that can precede the disease by three decades contributes to a measure of subtle memory loss, suggesting that clinical assessments probing at least this measure may be useful early
