Stephanie Cosentino
Columbia University
175 Papers
464 Citations
Stephanie Cosentino is an academic researcher from Columbia University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Dementia & Cognition. The author has an hindex of 30, co-authored 137 publications. Previous affiliations of Stephanie Cosentino include Columbia University Medical Center.
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Papers
Physical Activity, Diet, and Risk of Alzheimer Disease
Nikolaos Scarmeas,José A. Luchsinger,Nicole Schupf,Adam M. Brickman,Stephanie Cosentino,Ming-Xin Tang,Yaakov Stern +6 more
TL;DR: Both higher Mediterranean-type diet adherence and higher physical activity were independently associated with reduced risk for AD.
APOE ε4 allele predicts faster cognitive decline in mild Alzheimer disease
Stephanie Cosentino,Nikolaos Scarmeas,Elizabeth Helzner,M. Maria Glymour,Jason Brandt,Marilyn S. Albert,Deborah Blacker,Yaakov Stern +7 more
TL;DR: APOE ε4 may influence rate of cognitive decline most significantly in the earliest stages of Alzheimer disease, particularly in the incident population-based AD group.
Leisure activity and cognitive decline in incident Alzheimer disease.
TL;DR: Greater participation in prediagnosis leisure activities, especially intellectual activities, was associated with faster cognitive decline, supporting the hypothesis that the disease course in AD may vary as a function of cognitive reserve.
Objective metamemory testing captures awareness of deficit in Alzheimer's disease.
TL;DR: Preliminary support is provided for the use of a recognition-based verbal episodic memory monitoring task as a quantitative measure of awareness for memory loss in AD, and insight is offered into the manner in which metamemory breaks down.
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Use and cost of hospitalization in dementia: longitudinal results from a community-based study
Carolyn W. Zhu,Carolyn W. Zhu,Stephanie Cosentino,Katherine A. Ornstein,Yian Gu,Howard Andrews,Yaakov Stern +6 more
TL;DR: The aim of this study is to examine the relative contribution of functional impairment and cognitive deficits on risk of hospitalization and costs.