
Stefanie Tremblay
Editor at 4thSpace Concordia
PhD researcher | 2023-24 Public Scholar | Talks about dementia prevention 💬 | Neuroimaging of white matter 🧠 | Aging & health research | CIHR recipient 👩🏻
Articles
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Aug 10, 2024 |
msn.com | Stefanie Tremblay
Microsoft se preocupa por tu privacidadMicrosoft y nuestros proveedores de terceros usan cookies para almacenar y acceder a información como identificadores únicos para entregar, mantener y mejorar nuestros servicios y anuncios. Si está de acuerdo, MSN y Microsoft Bing personalizarán el contenido y los anuncios que vea.
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Aug 10, 2024 |
lavanguardia.com | Stefanie Tremblay
Longevity Una mujer de 65 años busca repetidamente ayuda médica por sus pérdidas de memoria. Primero le dicen que no hay nada de que preocuparse y, un año después, que es “simplemente un envejecimiento normal”. Hasta que finalmente hay otro diagnóstico: “Es alzheimer. No hay cura”. Escenarios como este son demasiado comunes. La demencia sigue estando infradiagnosticada en gran medida, incluso en países con alto nivel económico.
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May 22, 2024 |
policymagazine.ca | in Voices |Stefanie Tremblay
|In Emerging Voices, Policy Special Alzheimer’s Society of CanadaBy Stéfanie TremblayMay 22, 2024Dementia is a debilitating condition that currently affects more than 750,000 adults from all Canadian provinces, their caregivers, and society as a whole due to its impact on the health care system and the economy.
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Feb 28, 2024 |
biorxiv.org | Stefanie Tremblay |Zaki Alasmar |Felix Carbonell |Amir Pirhadi
AbstractMultivariate approaches have recently gained in popularity to address the physiological unspecificity of neuroimaging metrics and to better characterize the complexity of biological processes underlying behavior. However, commonly used approaches are biased by the intrinsic associations between variables, or they are computationally expensive and may be more complicated to implement than standard univariate approaches.
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Sep 21, 2023 |
everythingzoomer.com | Stefanie Tremblay
| September 21st, 2023By encouraging people to be physically, mentally and socially active, we can potentially keep a significant number of dementia cases at bay. Photo: Dougal Waters/Getty ImagesA 65-year-old woman repeatedly seeks medical help for her failing memory. She is first told it’s nothing to worry about, then, a year later, that it’s “just normal aging.” Until finally, the penny drops: “It’s Alzheimer’s. There is no cure.”Scenarios like this one are too common.
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RT @AlfieWearn: Huge team effort so thanks to all co-authors incl. @Nathan_Spreng @Stefanie_tre @giuliaabaracc @Colleen_H15 @PatrickHewan @…

RT @zklsmr: Very excited to see this one out! co-led with @Stefanie_tre, we first developed a toolbox to integrate neuroimaging microstruct…

What a great conference! The perfect balance of scientific talks, career development, skills workshops, mentoring…! Meeting all these amazing people with lived experience and those committed to make a change in the field has been truly inspiring 🤩

Thanks for joining us in Banff! Always a pleasure to see everyone in person after so many zoom calls 🤩 https://t.co/sBCaCCX5k2