Our Research Focus Heading link
The Midwest Roybal Center for Health Promotion and Translation supports the design and testing of principle-driven, potent health promotion interventions that have strong promise of progressing through the NIH Stage Change Model. The Center continues to focus on designing interventions for older racial/ethnic minority adults but expands our focus to include cognitive health. The Center targets four thematic areas of focus to improve cognitive function, namely:
♦ Physical activity engagement and maintenance
♦ Enhancing mobility
♦ Harnessing technology to improve intervention scalability and fidelity
♦ Incorporating mechanisms of action that will sustain behavior change
Finally, the Center incorporates for the first time a Multi-modal ADRD Imaging and Connectomics Core that is enabling investigators to perform brain imaging, interpretation, and storage. The Center also promotes the uniform use across funded pilots of cognitive and physical activity measures from the NIH Toolbox; thereby, enabling the comparison of common outcomes across diverse samples and interventions.
Pilot Studies - Doctoral Research Awards Heading link
Doctoral Research
Savitha Subramaniam Heading link
Savitha Subramaniam
Email: ssubra26@uic.edu
Dr. Subramaniam received her BS in physical therapy from the Tamilnadu Dr.M.G.R. Medical University, and an MS and Ph.D. in kinesiology and nutrition from UIC. Her research interests include determining the efficacy of alternative therapies on cardiovascular functioning, cognitive-motor interference and its effect on balance and fall risk among young, older and neurologically-impaired adults. She is also interested in evaluating the efficacy of translating alternative therapies to long-term home-based interventions.
Rudri Purohit Heading link
Rudri Purohit
Email: rpuroh2@uic.edu
Rudri Purohit, PhD candidate in rehabilitation sciences, is the recipient of a 2023-2024 Midwest Roybal Center for Health Promotion and Translation doctoral pilot grant for her project titled, “Home-based ABC training among older adults with chronic stroke.”
Lakshmi Kannan Heading link
Lakshmi Kannan
Email: lkanna2@uic.edu
Kannan earned her BS in physiotherapy from Padmashree Dr. D.Y. Patil University in India and an MS in rehabilitation sciences from UIC. Her research interests include dual-task testing and training among people with stroke and older adults. She is currently working on examining the effects of cognitive-motor training on balance control and cognition with an aim to reduce the risk of falls among older adults with mild cognitive impairment.