Complete video at: fora.tv Emma Shulman, a 95-year-old lecturer and Senior Family Counselor at NYU's Silberstein Institute, describes how memory, how to maximize the brain ages. ----- NYU's Silberstein Institute (the Aging and Dementia Clinical and Research Institute at the NYU Langone Medical Center) presents an interview with Emma Shulman, LCSW, MPH David Silberstein Hittson of the Institute. Shulman answers questions about aging and memory changes. A 95-year-old dynamic speakerhigh demand in New York, she has many years experience working with older people. After 27 years of service at NYU, William and Sylvia Silberstein Institute for Aging and Dementia, Emma Shulman, LSW, MPH, Senior Family Counselor is his, at the age of 95, took an MA in cultural anthropology, to pursue her fifth master's degree. Shulman was the Institute as a 68-year-old volunteers to study aging and add a degree in gerontology, this she had earned in social work,Economics and Psychology. is In 1980 she joined the staff as a research coordinator of the NIA-supported longitudinal study of aging and Alzheimer's disease is still the largest and longest of its kind in the world and co-leader of two carers support groups that she and her colleague, Gertrude Steinberg, began at NYU's Alzheimer's Disease Research Center. She also helped the launch in New York City chapter of the Alzheimer's Association. Shulman, who was in the 2005 Business Week cover story featured...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iuYYiFYJdlo&hl=en