Brickman Lab
Location and Contact Information
Principal Investigator
The Brickman Lab, 2025
Our mission is simple yet ambitious: to use neuroimaging as a tool for discovery, equity, and impact—advancing science that improves lives everywhere.
Research Overview
At the Brickman Lab, we combine advanced neuroimaging technology with innovative research to understand how the brain changes with age and disease. Our work focuses on the role of white matter abnormalities and small vessel cerebrovascular disease in cognitive aging and Alzheimer’s disease (AD). By developing cutting-edge methods to measure white matter hyperintensities (WMH) and other vascular markers, we aim to uncover how these changes interact with biological processes in AD—and ultimately identify new targets for treatment.
Our research spans local, national, and international collaborations, with a strong commitment to community-based, population-representative studies. Using epidemiological approaches, we follow diverse cohorts over time to learn how brain health evolves across the lifespan. Early findings suggest that individuals at the highest risk for Alzheimer’s—those with amnestic mild cognitive impairment—carry the greatest burden of small vessel disease, including WMH, microbleeds, and infarcts.
Most recently, we launched a groundbreaking initiative: bringing the world’s first portable MRI scanner to rural South Africa. This low-field imaging technology will allow us to study neurodegeneration and cerebrovascular disease in low-resource settings, in partnership with the University of Witwatersrand and Harvard University. If successful, this project will transform global brain health research and strengthen scientific collaborations across continents.
Other projects, collaborations & initiatives include:
- The Alzheimer’s Consortium-Down Syndrome [ABC-DS]
- Vascular Contributions to HIV-Associated Neurocognitive Disorders [HAND]
- The Washington Heights Inwood Columbia Aging Project [WHICAP]
- The Offspring Study of Mechanisms for Racial Disparities in Alzheimer’s Disease [OFFSPRING]
- The Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center at Columbia University [ADRC]
- Diverse Vascular Contributions to Cognitive Impairment and Dementia [DVCID; in collaboration with UC Davis]
- The Northern Manhattan Study of Metabolism and Mind [NOMEM; in collaboration with Dr. Jose Luchsinger]
- Health and Aging in Africa: Longitudinal Studies in South Africa [HAALSA; in collaboration with Harvard University and Wits University]
- The National Longitudinal Study of The High School Class of 1972 [NLS-72; in collaboration with the University of Texas in Austin and the Department of Education]
- Brain Health and Neurocognition after Pregnancy [nuMoM; in collaboration with Dr. Eliza Miller at the University of Pittsburgh]
- Resilience/Resistance against Alzheimer’s Disease in Centenarians & Offspring [RADCO; in collaboration with Boston University]
- NVU Function in post-TBI Cognitive Impairment [in collaboration with the Scintillon Research Institute and the Department of Defense]
- Summer of Translational Aging Research for Undergraduates [STAR U]
- Interested in working for us? Check Columbia’s HR website for open positions or email us at ch3190@cumc.columbia.edu.
- Interested in becoming a study participant? Inquire on RecruitMe or here.
- Interested in financially contributing to our work? Explore donation options here.














