颁辞苍蝉辞谤迟颈补听
International research consortia provide opportunities for researchers to share and compare data from existing studies, allowing systematic examination of brain ageing on a larger scale.
Researchers at CHeBA are studying the process of human ageing to determine the factors that influence the trajectory of healthy ageing and age-related cognitive decline, including dementia. At CHeBA, we are taking a lead in this line of investigation by making it international.
Many research groups from around the world have asked similar questions and established local or national cohorts. Combining these studies into consortia not only provides large sample sizes necessary to address some of the questions, it also provides the ability to replicate the findings of one study in other studies in different geographical areas and ethnic groups. Consortia also help to determine which risk and protective factors are truly global and which factors may be unique to socioeconomic or ethnic groups.聽Consortia also help to determine which risk and protective factors are truly global.
CHeBA leads the following international consortia which are partially funded by the聽The Dementia Momentum庐听颈苍颈迟颈补迟颈惫别:
ICC Dementia
STROKOG
COGNISANCE
Global CADASIL Consortium (GCC)
CHeBA is a contributing member of the following international consortia:
- 聽(Brain Imaging, cognition, Dementia and next generation Genomics: a Transdisciplinary approach to search for risk and protective factors of neurodegenerative disease)
- 聽(Cohorts for Heart & Ageing Research in Genetic Epidemiology)
- DIAN (Dominantly Inherited Alzheimer Network)
- 聽(A European DNA bank for deciphering the missing heritability of Alzheimer鈥檚 disease)
- 聽(Enhancing Neuro-Imaging Genetics through Meta-Analyses)
- EuroDiscoTWIN (European Discordant Twin Study)
- IALSA (Integrative Analysis of Longitudinal Studies on Aging and Dementia)
- 聽(Consortium on Interplay of Genes and Environment across Multiple Studies)
- 聽(Defining Genetic, Polygenetic and Environmental Risk for Alzheimer's Disease)