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Center for BrainHealth

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Center for BrainHealth at The University of Texas at Dallas is a research institute uniquely focused on brain health fitness by providing baseline testing, comprehensive assessments, customized interventions, education, outbound programs, and, most importantly, advanced research translated into immediate clinical treatment. [1], the Center for BrainHealth is one the first institutions to capitalize on the “next frontier” in scientific exploration - the brain. [2]. Center for BrainHealth is the first and only facility to develop and administer the BrainHealth Physical [3], a benchmark test of cognitive reserve in pivotal areas of higher order mental function for the purpose of mapping and preventing cognitive changes and decline in individuals. Under Dr. Chapman’s leadership, the vision for cognitive brain research corroboratively linked with clinical practice has attracted leading scientists and researchers from across the country and around the world and has led to collaborations with Johns Hopkins, UC Berkley, Rutgers, Harvard, and Stanford.

The BuildingBig text The Center for BrainHealth building, [4], Inc., sits on 3.5 tree-lined acres, and offers 63,000-square-feet of space dedicated to brain research, education, and treatment. The Center for BrainHealth is located north of downtown Dallas in the Frances and Mildred Goad Building. The acquisition of the building, originally constructed in 1970, was made possible by a $5 million gift from Dallas community leader Dianne Cash, whose mother and grandmother serve as the building’s namesakes. The Center for BrainHealth’s Board is responsible for donations totaling in excess of $15 million, which paid for the facility’s 2007 completion as well as research and treatment programs. The facilities include electroencephalography laboratories for recording the brain’s electrical rhythms during cognitive tasks, high capacity computers and data analysis tools, an MRI machine, two EEG labs, an rTMS (Repetitive Transcanial Memory Stipulation) [5] for the study and treatment of Gulf War Syndrome and PTSD (Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder), a brain morphometric laboratory for measuring the sizes of brain regions, a Virtual Learning Center made possible by the generosity and vision of [6], which employs the safety of [7]for the study and treatment of various social cognition deficits, and a state-of-the-art auditorium which houses the second-largest rear-projection glass screen in the state of Texas. The building houses more than 125 researchers, post-doctoral fellows, doctoral and master’s students, and research clinicians.

  1. ^ Robert Miller. (21 January). The Dallas Morning News Robert Miller column: BrainHealth takes pleasure in new center. Knight Ridder Tribune Business News, 1.
  2. ^ Robert Miller. (21 January). The Dallas Morning News Robert Miller column: BrainHealth takes pleasure in new center. Founded in 1999 by Dr. Sandra Bond Chapman Knight Ridder Tribune Business News, 1.
  3. ^ ENERSEN, J. (2010, May 19). How about a brain physical? KTVB.com. Retrieved from http://www.ktvb.com/ news/health/How-about-a-brain-physical-94265799.html
  4. ^ Robert Miller. (21 January). The Dallas Morning News Robert Miller column: BrainHealth takes pleasure in new center. Knight Ridder Tribune Business News, 1.
  5. ^ Cheatham, K. (2009, November 13). Brain Matters. Retrieved from http://www.brainhealth.utdallas.edu/documents/Haptics.pdf
  6. ^ Helman, C. (2008). Inside Boone's Brain. Forbes Asia, 4(12), 86-87.
  7. ^ Merz Nagel, D. (2009, Spring). People with Asberger's Syndrome Learn Social Skills in Second Life . Telehealth world . Retrieved from http://www.telehealthworld.com/images/Spring09.pdf