
Languages Spoken: English
Labs: Website
Dr. David Tate is a clinical neuropsychologist trained at Brigham Young University and Brown Medical School. He is heavily involved in medical imaging research used to examine a number of developmental, clinical, and medical disorders including traumatic brain injury and HIV. Dr. Tate has held faculty appointments at Brown University, Boston University, Harvard Medical School, University of Texas Health Science Center, and The University of Missouri-St. Louis. Dr. Tate has an active funded research program that explores the biological and cognitive benefits of cognitive rehabilitation treatments for service members with a traumatic brain injury. He also supports the Neuroimaging Core for the Chronic Effects of Neurotrauma Consortium (CENC) which is a multicenter DoD/VA funded collaborative effort to study the long-term effects of mild traumatic brain injury among US service members and veterans. He also supports research examining the imaging and cognitive effects high altitude flying has on pilots working in decompressed environments. Clinically, he also see TBI patients for forensic and general assessments and treatment.
Clinical Locations
801-585-7575
Specialties
Board Certification and Academic Information
Academic Departments | Neurology
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Associate Professor |
Academic Divisions | Cognitive Neurology |
Dr. David Tate is a clinical neuropsychologist trained at Brigham Young University and Brown Medical School. He is heavily involved in medical imaging research used to examine a number of developmental, clinical, and medical disorders including traumatic brain injury and HIV. Dr. Tate has held faculty appointments at Brown University, Boston University, Harvard Medical School, University of Texas Health Science Center, and The University of Missouri-St. Louis. Dr. Tate has an active funded research program that explores the biological and cognitive benefits of cognitive rehabilitation treatments for service members with a traumatic brain injury. He also supports the Neuroimaging Core for the Chronic Effects of Neurotrauma Consortium (CENC) which is a multicenter DoD/VA funded collaborative effort to study the long-term effects of mild traumatic brain injury among US service members and veterans. He also supports research examining the imaging and cognitive effects high altitude flying has on pilots working in decompressed environments. Clinically, he also see TBI patients for forensic and general assessments and treatment.
Academic Locations
Imaging and Neurosciences Center
801-585-7575
Research Statement
For the past 20 years, I have had numerous opportunities to be involved in all levels of neuroimaging research, development and supervision. During this time, I have personally completed a Clinical Mentored K23 Award funded by NIMH/NINDS dedicated to developing cutting-edge MRI technology and served as PI of several NIH and DoD subawards. Currently I am the PI for a number of DoD funded studies focused on neuroimaging applications including both diffusion tensor imaging and structural MRI in Veterans and Service Members with a history of TBI. As part of these grants, I have supervised and continue to supervise students and staff in accomplishing research aims. Over the course of my career I have applied multiple imaging modalities to examine various CNS disorders and injury including HIV infection, Alzheimer’s Disease, carbon monoxide poisoning, cardiovascular disease, developmental disorders, decompression syndromes, and TBI. More recently, I have been supporting VA funded research of intimate partner violence in female Veterans to investigate how concussion and TBI may exacerbate the biological and cognitive effects of emotional trauma experienced by the women survivors. As a result, I have extensive experience using state of the art MRI measures to examine aspects of behavior/cognition in vulnerable patient populations. Combined, these experiences have provided me with a solid foundation in research design, MRI post-processing, data analyses, data dissemination, and supervision skills that can be directly applied to this study.
Board Certification and Academic Information
Academic Departments | Neurology
-
Associate Professor |
Academic Divisions | Cognitive Neurology |
Education History
Postdoctoral Fellowship | The Miriam Hospital, Brown Medical School Neuropsychology/HIV & Other Infectious Diseases Postdoctoral Fellow |
Internship | Brown University Clinical Neuropsychology Intern |
Doctoral Training | Brigham Young University Clinical Psychology, Neuropsychology Emphasis Ph.D. |
Undergraduate | Brigham Young University Psychology and Anthropology B.S., B.A. |
Selected Publications - Journal Articles
Journal Article
- Thompson PM, Jahanshad N, Ching CRK, Salminen LE, Thomopoulos SI, Bright J, Baune BT, Bertoln S, Bralten J, Bruin WB, Blow R, Chen J, Chye Y, Dannlowski U, de Kovel CGF, Donohoe G, Eyler LT, Faraone SV, Favre P, Filippi CA, Frodl T, Garijo D, Gil Y, Grabe HJ, Grasby KL, Hajek T, Han LKM, Hatton SN, Hilbert K, Ho TC, Holleran L, Homuth G, Hosten N, Houenou J, Ivanov I, Jia T, Kelly S, Klein M, Kwon JS, Laansma MA, Leerssen J, Lueken U, Nunes A, Neill JO, Opel N, Piras F, Piras F, Postema MC, Pozzi E, Shatokhina N, Soriano-Mas C, Spalletta G, Sun D, Teumer A, Tilot AK, Tozzi L, van der Merwe C, Van Someren EJW, van Wingen GA, Vlzke H, Walton E, Wang L, Winkler AM, Wittfeld K, Wright MJ, Yun JY, Zhang G, Zhang-James Y, Adhikari BM, Agartz I, Aghajani M, Aleman A, Althoff RR, Altmann A, Andreassen OA, Baron DA, Bartnik-Olson BL, Marie Bas-Hoogendam J, Baskin-Sommers AR, Bearden CE, Berner LA, Boedhoe PSW, Brouwer RM, Buitelaar JK, Caeyenberghs K, Cecil CAM, Cohen RA, Cole JH, Conrod PJ, De Brito SA, de Zwarte SMC, Dennis EL, Desrivieres S, Dima D, Ehrlich S, Esopenko C, Fairchild G, Fisher SE, Fouche JP, Francks C, Frangou S, Franke B, Garavan HP, Glahn DC, Groenewold NA, Gurholt TP, Gutman BA, Hahn T, Harding IH, Hernaus D, Hibar DP, Hillary FG, Hoogman M, Hulshoff Pol HE, Jalbrzikowski M, Karkashadze GA, Klapwijk ET, Knickmeyer RC, Kochunov P, Koerte IK, Kong XZ, Liew SL, Lin AP, Logue MW, Luders E, Macciardi F, Mackey S, Mayer AR, McDonald CR, McMahon AB, Medland SE, Modinos G, Morey RA, Mueller SC, Mukherjee P, Namazova-Baranova L, Nir TM, Olsen A, Paschou P, Pine DS, Pizzagalli F, Rentera ME, Rohrer JD, Smann PG, Schmaal L, Schumann G, Shiroishi MS, Sisodiya SM, Smit DJA, Snderby IE, Stein DJ, Stein JL, Tahmasian M, Tate DF, Turner JA, van den Heuvel OA, van der Wee NJA, van der Werf YD, van Erp TGM, van Haren NEM, van Rooij D, van Velzen LS, Veer IM, Veltman DJ, Villalon-Reina JE, Walter H, Whelan CD, Wilde EA, Zarei M, Zelman V, ENIGMA Consortium (2020). ENIGMA and global neuroscience: A decade of large-scale studies of the brain in health and disease across more than 40 countries. Transl Psychiatry, 10(1), 100.
- Dennis EL, Disner SG, Fani N, Salminen LE, Logue M, Clarke EK, Haswell CC, Averill CL, Baugh LA, Bomyea J, Bruce SE, Cha J, Choi K, Davenport ND, Densmore M, du Plessis S, Forster GL, Frijling JL, Gonenc A, Gruber S, Grupe DW, Guenette JP, Hayes J, Hofmann D, Ipser J, Jovanovic T, Kelly S, Kennis M, Kinzel P, Koch SBJ, Koerte I, Koopowitz S, Korgaonkar M, Krystal J, Lebois LAM, Li G, Magnotta VA, Manthey A, May GJ, Menefee DS, Nawijn L, Nelson SM, Neufeld RWJ, Nitschke JB, ODoherty D, Peverill M, Ressler KJ, Roos A, Sheridan MA, Sierk A, Simmons A, Simons RM, Simons JS, Stevens J, Suarez-Jimenez B, Sullivan DR, Thberge J, Tran JK, van den Heuvel L, van der Werff SJA, van Rooij SJH, van Zuiden M, Velez C, Verfaellie M, Vermeiren RRJM, Wade BSC, Wager T, Walter H, Winternitz S, Wolff J, York G, Zhu Y, Zhu X, Abdallah CG, Bryant R, Daniels JK, Davidson RJ, Fercho KA, Franz C, Geuze E, Gordon EM, Kaufman ML, Kremen WS, Lagopoulos J, Lanius RA, Lyons MJ, McCauley SR, McGlinchey R, McLaughlin KA, Milberg W, Neria Y, Olff M, Seedat S, Shenton M, Sponheim SR, Stein DJ, Stein MB, Straube T, Tate DF, van der Wee NJA, Veltman DJ, Wang L, Wilde EA, Thompson PM, Kochunov P, Jahanshad N, Morey RA (2019). Altered white matter microstructural organization in posttraumatic stress disorder across 3047 adults: results from the PGC-ENIGMA PTSD consortium. (Epub ahead of print) Mol Psychiatry.
- Pugh MJ, Swan AA, Amuan ME, Eapen BC, Jaramillo CA, Delgado R, Tate DF, Yaffe K, Wang CP (2019). Deployment, suicide, and overdose among comorbidity phenotypes following mild traumatic brain injury: A retrospective cohort study from the Chronic Effects of Neurotrauma Consortium. PLoS ONE, 14(9), e0222674.
- Bigler ED, Abildskov TJ, Eggleston B, Taylor BA, Tate DF, Petrie JA, Newsome MR, Scheibel RS, Levin H, Walker WC, Goodrich-Hunsaker N, Tustison NJ, Stone JR, Mayer AR, Duncan TD, York GE, Wilde EA (2019). Structural neuroimaging in mild traumatic brain injury: A chronic effects of neurotrauma consortium study. Int J Methods Psychiatr Res, 28(3), e1781.
- Belanger HG, Vanderploeg RD, Curtiss G, Armistead-Jehle P, Kennedy JE, Tate DF, Eapen BC, Bowles AO, Cooper DB (2019). Self-efficacy predicts response to cognitive rehabilitation in military service members with post-concussive symptoms. Neuropsychological Rehabilitation, 1-14.
- Ramage AE, Tate DF, New AB, Lewis JD, Robin DA (2019). Effort and Fatigue-Related Functional Connectivity in Mild Traumatic Brain Injury. Front Neurol, 9, 1165.
- Bigler ED, Skiles M, Wade BSC, Abildskov TJ, Tustison NJ, Scheibel RS, Newsome MR, Mayer AR, Stone JR, Taylor BA, Tate DF, Walker WC, Levin HS, Wilde EA (2018). FreeSurfer 5.3 versus 6.0: are volumes comparable? A Chronic Effects of Neurotrauma Consortium study. (Epub ahead of print) Brain Imaging Behav.
- Wilde EA, Provenzale JM, Taylor BA, Boss M, Zuccolotto A, Hachey R, Pathak S, Tate DF, Abildskov TJ, Schneider W (2018). Assessment of quantitative magnetic resonance imaging metrics in the brain through the use of a novel phantom. Brain Inj, 32(10), 1266-1276.