10:05 Magnetic Resonance technology for brain imaging today and tomorrow - Risto Kauppinen, Bristol
10:25 Using port-mortem tissue to measure functional & structural data relevant to interpretation of MRI - Seth Love, Bristol
11:00 MRI of animal models for Alzheimer's disease - Ian Harrison, UCL London
11:35 Volumetric MRI: tracking the onset and progression of neurodegeneration with serial MRI - Nick Fox, UCL London
12:10 Automated analysis of structural MRI - Mark Jenkinson, Oxford
12:45 Lunch
13:45 Fractioning cognitive function to diagnose dementia - Elizabeth Coulthard, University of Bristol
14:20 Modulators of age- and Alzheimer disease-related atrophy in medial temporal lobe subregions using high-resolution MRI at 7T - Laura Wisse, Philadelphia (USA) & Utrecht, (Holland)
14:55 Magnetic resonance imaging of glymphatic brain pulsations: potential clinical applications - Vesa Kiviniemi, University of Oulu (Finland)
15:10 Magnetic resonance imaging of glymphatic brain pulsations: potential clinical applications - Vesa Kiviniemi, Oulu (Finland)
15:30 Tea/coffee
16:00 Early Detection of Alzheimer's Disease using High field Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy - Gulin Oz, Minneapolis (USA)
16:35 Molecular Imaging of Dementia with PET - Roger Gunn, IC London
17:10 Close Day 1
Day 2 (10th June 2016)
09:00 Magnetic resonance relaxation as a marker of ageing and cognitive decline - Michael Knight, Bristol
09:35 Towards in-vivo histology using MRI for dementia pathology - Nik Weiskopf, UCL London & Leipzig (Germany)
10:10 Multi-centre imaging studies: what have we learned to guide dementia trials? - Annalena Venneri, Sheffield
10:40 Multi-modal MRI investigation of volumetric and microstructural changes in the hippocampus and its subfields in mild cognitive impairment, Alzheimer's disease and dementia with Lewy bodies - Elijah Mak, University of Cambridge
10:52 T2 relaxation times in hippocampal subfields in mild cognitive impairment and early-stage Alzheimer's disease - Brony McCann, University of Bristol
11:04 Morphology of the hippocampus and hippocampal subfields in early-stage AD cohorts from high-resolution T2 MRI data - Terry Norton, University of Bristol
11:16 Relationship between hippocampal subfield volumes and consolidation in healthy ageing, mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer's disease - Hanna Isotalus, University of Bristol
11:28 Differences in parahippocampal cingulum white matter microstructure in young adult APOE-ε4 carriers - Carl Hodgetts, Cardiff University
11:40 Structural MRI analysis using research software in clinical dementia - Robin Holmes, University Hospitals Bristol NHS Trust
11:52 Memory and hippocampal volume in behavioural variant FTD - Catherine Pennington, University of Bristol
12:04 Lunch
13:00 Arterial Spin Labeling MRI for the characterization of cognitice decline and dementia - David Alsop, Boston (USA)
13:35 Predicting dementia in cerebral small vessel disease using multimodel MRI - Hugh Markus, Cambridge
14:10 APOE-e4 influences on early adulthood cognition - Kim Graham, Cardiff
14:45 Tea/coffee
15:05 Prospects and challenges for resting-state fMRI in ageing and dementia - Eugene Duff, Oxford
15:40 Positive effects of APOE-ε4 on left posteromedial cortex structure and verbal episodic memory in healthy adults at midlife - Claudia Metzler-Baddeley, Cardiff University
15:52 The status of the precommissural and postcommissural fornix in normal ageing and mild cognitive impairment: An MRI tractography study - Kat Christiansen, Cardiff University
16:04 Mapping white matter demyelination in Huntington's disease with magnetic resonance imaging - Claudia Metzler-Baddeley, Cardiff University
16:16 Structural connectivity of motor pathways in Parkinson's disease - Jilu Mole, Cardiff University
16:28 Atrophic covariance as a measure of network-wide neurodegeneration and a potential marker of post-stroke dementia - Michele Veldsman, The Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health
16:40 Comparing spatial distributions of white matter hyperintensities in mild cognitive impairment, Alzheimer's disease and dementia with Lewy bodies: findings from the NIMROD study - Silvy Gabel, University of Cambridge