An effect of education on memory-encoding activation in subjective cognitive decline

Manuscript Number: 

20-1087R2

Author(s): 
Howard Aizenstein, Ann D. Cohen, Helmet T. Karim, William E. Klunk, Brian J. Lopresti, Maria J. Ly, Chester A. Mathis, Akiko Mizuno, Beth E. Snitz

Disclosures

Howard Aizenstein

  • Nothing to Disclose

Ann D. Cohen

  • Nothing to Disclose

Helmet T. Karim

  • Nothing to Disclose

William E. Klunk

  • Equity:
    Cognoptix-privately held stocks ~$10K
    Lecture Fees:
    GE Healthcare virtual lecture for Society for Nuclear Medicine; ~$9K
    Patents/Royalties
    Patents related to PiB PET amyloid imaging technology owned by the University of Pittsburgh and licensed to GE Healthcare. I receive inventor-share payments through the University of Pittsburgh based on royalties paid to the University by GE Healthcare.

Brian J. Lopresti

  • Consulting Fees:
    Paid consultant of New York University Langone Medical Center ($10k-$15k/yr) providing technical expertise for PET instrumentation and data analysis.
    Patents/Royalties
    US Patent 6138302, "Apparatus and method for positioning patient". Patent is assigned to the University of Pittsburgh and is not currently licensed. No royalties are received.

Maria J. Ly

  • Nothing to Disclose

Chester A. Mathis

  • Patents/Royalties
    GE Healthcare holds a license agreement with the University of Pittsburgh based on the technology described in this manuscript. Drs. Mathis and Klunk are co-inventors of PiB and, as such, have a financial interest in this license agreement. GE Healthcare provided no grant support for this study and had no role in the design or interpretation of results or preparation of this manuscript.

Akiko Mizuno

  • Nothing to Disclose

Beth E. Snitz

  • Nothing to Disclose