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Psychology

D-Index
41
Citations
9217
World Ranking
7792
National Ranking
460

Overview

Greg Savage is affiliated with Macquarie University in Australia and has contributed extensively to research in medicine and neuroscience. Their work spans several main fields, including:

  • Medicine
  • Neuroscience

Within these, key subfields of study include:

  • Cognitive Neuroscience
  • Psychiatry and Mental Health
  • Physiology
  • Experimental and Cognitive Psychology
  • Molecular Biology

Savage's primary research topics cover areas such as:

  • Dementia and Cognitive Impairment Research
  • Functional Brain Connectivity Studies
  • Alzheimer's Disease Research and Treatments
  • Memory and Neural Mechanisms
  • Health, Environment, Cognitive Aging
  • EEG and Brain-Computer Interfaces
  • Hearing Loss and Rehabilitation

Several recent papers illustrate the researcher's focus on neurodegenerative diseases and brain function across the lifespan. Notable publications include:

  • Risk prediction of late-onset Alzheimer's disease implies an oligogenic architecture, 2020, Nature Communications
  • Fifteen Years of the Australian Imaging, Biomarkers and Lifestyle (AIBL) Study: Progress and Observations from 2,359 Older Adults Spanning the Spectrum from Cognitive Normality to Alzheimer's Disease, 2021, Journal of Alzheimer s Disease Reports
  • Asymmetric thinning of the cerebral cortex across the adult lifespan is accelerated in Alzheimer's disease, 2021, Nature Communications
  • Mesial temporal tau is related to worse cognitive performance and greater neocortical tau load in amyloid-β-negative cognitively normal individuals, 2020, Neurobiology of Aging
  • Motor neuroplasticity: A MEG-fMRI study of motor imagery and execution in healthy ageing, 2020, Neuropsychologia

Frequent publication venues where Savage's work appears include:

  • Alzheimer s & Dementia
  • Nature Communications
  • Journal of Alzheimer s Disease Reports
  • Neuropsychology Review
  • Neurobiology of Aging

The researcher collaborates regularly with a number of co-authors, including:

  • Samantha C. Burnham
  • Victor L. Villemagne
  • Paul Maruff
  • Colin L. Masters
  • Ralph N. Martins

Best Publications

  • Imaging beta-amyloid burden in aging and dementia.

    Christopher C Rowe;Steven Ng;Uwe Ackermann;Sylvia Gong

  • The Australian Imaging, Biomarkers and Lifestyle (AIBL) study of aging: Methodology and baseline characteristics of 1112 individuals recruited for a longitudinal study of Alzheimer's disease

    Kathryn A Ellis;Ashley I Bush;David Darby;Daniela De Fazio

  • Beta-amyloid imaging and memory in non-demented individuals: evidence for preclinical Alzheimer's disease.

    Kerryn Elizabeth Pike;Gregory Raymond Savage;Victor L Villemagne;Steven Ng

  • Aβ deposits in older non-demented individuals with cognitive decline are indicative of preclinical Alzheimer's disease

    Victor L Villemagne;Kerryn Elizabeth Pike;David Darby;Paul Maruff

  • Risk prediction of late-onset Alzheimer’s disease implies an oligogenic architecture

    Qian Zhang;Julia Sidorenko;Baptiste Couvy-Duchesne;Riccardo E. Marioni

  • Clinical and cognitive trajectories in cognitively healthy elderly individuals with suspected non-Alzheimer's disease pathophysiology (SNAP) or Alzheimer's disease pathology : a longitudinal study

    Samantha C. Burnham;Pierrick T. Bourgeat;Vincent Doré;Greg R. Savage

  • Predicting Alzheimer disease with β-amyloid imaging: Results from the Australian imaging, biomarkers, and lifestyle study of ageing

    Christopher C. Rowe;Pierrick Bourgeat;Kathryn A. Ellis;Belinda M. Brown

  • Subjective memory decline predicts greater rates of clinical progression in preclinical Alzheimer's disease

    Rachel F. Buckley;Paul Maruff;David Ames;Pierrick Bourgeat

  • Paracingulate morphologic differences in males with established schizophrenia: a magnetic resonance imaging morphometric study.

    Murat Yucel;Murat Yucel;Murat Yucel;Geoffrey W Stuart;Geoffrey W Stuart;Paul Maruff;Paul Maruff;Stephen J Wood;Stephen J Wood

  • Factors affecting subjective memory complaints in the AIBL aging study: biomarkers, memory, affect, and age.

    R. Buckley;M.M. Saling;D.J. Ames;C.C. Rowe

  • Fifteen Years of the Australian Imaging, Biomarkers and Lifestyle (AIBL) Study: Progress and Observations from 2,359 Older Adults Spanning the Spectrum from Cognitive Normality to Alzheimer's Disease.

    Christopher Fowler;Stephanie R. Rainey-Smith;Sabine Bird;Julia Bomke

  • Use of the CogState Brief Battery in the assessment of Alzheimer's disease related cognitive impairment in the Australian Imaging, Biomarkers and Lifestyle (AIBL) study

    Yen Ying Lim;Kathryn A Ellis;Karra Harrington;David Ames

  • Crossmodal congruency measures of lateral distance effects on the rubber hand illusion.

    Regine Zopf;Greg Savage;Mark A. Williams

  • Aging and large-scale functional networks: white matter integrity, gray matter volume, and functional connectivity in the resting state.

    Lars Marstaller;M. Williams;A. Rich;G. Savage

  • Addenbrooke's Cognitive Examination III: psychometric characteristics and relations to functional ability in dementia

    Matthew So;David Foxe;Fiona Kumfor;Cynthia Murray

  • Multimodal functional imaging of motor imagery using a novel paradigm

    Hana Burianova;Lars Marstaller;Paul F. Sowman;Graciela Tesan

  • Genetic algorithm with logistic regression for prediction of progression to Alzheimer's disease

    Piers Johnson;Luke Vandewater;William Wilson;Paul Thomas Maruff

  • Retinal vascular and structural changes are associated with amyloid burden in the elderly: ophthalmic biomarkers of preclinical Alzheimer’s disease

    S.Mojtaba Golzan;S.Mojtaba Golzan;Kathryn Goozee;Dana Georgevsky;Alberto Avolio

  • Stronger effect of amyloid load than APOE genotype on cognitive decline in healthy older adults

    Yen Ying Lim;Kathryn A. Ellis;Robert H. Pietrzak;David Ames

  • Olfactory deficits and amyloid-β burden in Alzheimer's disease, mild cognitive impairment, and healthy aging: a PiB PET study.

    Alex Bahar-Fuchs;Gael Chetelat;Victor L Villemagne;Simon Moss

  • Influence of population versus convenience sampling on sample characteristics in studies of cognitive aging

    Henry Brodaty;Annu Mothakunnel;Melissa de Vel-Palumbo;David Ames

  • Asymmetric thinning of the cerebral cortex across the adult lifespan is accelerated in Alzheimer's Disease

    James M. Roe;Didac Vidal-Piñeiro;Øystein Sørensen;Andreas M. Brandmaier

Frequent Co-Authors

David Ames
David Ames University of Melbourne
Paul Maruff
Paul Maruff University of Melbourne
Yen Ying Lim
Yen Ying Lim Monash University
Nicola T. Lautenschlager
Nicola T. Lautenschlager University of Melbourne
Hamid R. Sohrabi
Hamid R. Sohrabi Murdoch University
Michael M. Saling
Michael M. Saling University of Melbourne
Jonathan K. Foster
Jonathan K. Foster Curtin University
Muireann Irish
Muireann Irish University of Sydney
Mark A. Williams
Mark A. Williams Macquarie University
Anne Castles
Anne Castles Macquarie University

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