Isaac Saywell

Isaac Saywell

Higher Degree by Research Candidate

School of Psychology

Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences


I am a PhD student in the Cognitive Neural Sciences Lab. Generally, my research considers how certain lifestyle factors, such as education, occupation, leisure activity engagement, intelligence, and several other variables, influence cognitive and motor outcomes for both alpha-synucleinopathy and traumatic brain injury patients. More specifically, I am focused on understanding how these lifestyle variables contribute to the development of a hypothetical brain construct, namely cognitive reserve. This concept has been proposed to justify neuropathologically unexplainable mismatches differences in clinical outcomes for individuals suffering from neurodegeneration. In simpler terms, those with a higher cognitive reserve can better stave off symptoms of degenerative brain diseases to extend quality of life. Thus, understanding how cognitive reserve interacts with pathology, cognition, motor function, and other relevant factors is vital to improving diagnosis, prognostic predictions, and treatment decisions in a clinical setting.

Currently, I am invovled in a large scope research study examining a plethora of different outcomes across healthy adults, Parkinson's disease patients, and traumatic brain injury patients, with the broad goal of investigating how cognition changes across the lifespan for these populations.

  • Journals

    Year Citation
    2024 Saywell, I., Foreman, L., Child, B., Phillips-Hughes, A. L., Collins-Praino, L., & Baetu, I. (2024). Influence of cognitive reserve on cognitive and motor function in α-synucleinopathies: A systematic review and multilevel meta-analysis. Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews, 161, 28 pages.
    DOI
    2024 Child, B., Saywell, I., da Silva, R., Collins-Praino, L., & Baetu, I. (2024). Cognitive function in different motor subtypes of Parkinson's disease: A systematic review protocol.. Health Sci Rep, 7(5), e2092.
    DOI Scopus1
    2023 Saywell, I., Child, B., Foreman, L., Collins‐Praino, L., & Baetu, I. (2023). Influence of cognitive reserve on cognitive and motor function in α‐synucleinopathies: A systematic review protocol. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1522(1), 15-23.
    DOI Scopus2 Europe PMC1

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