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RCCN Goals and Leadership

The problems associated with an aging society transcend the boundaries of any specific discipline and play out across multiple biologic and societal domains ranging from individual cells, to organs and organ systems, to persons, to communities, to national and world economies. The seven National Institute on Aging (NIA) Center programs address important topics in aging but typically from a specific disciplinary perspective.

The objective of the Research Centers Collaborative Network (RCCN) is to initiate new cross-disciplinary collaborative networks that bring together key thought leaders from each of the seven NIA center programs to align approaches across programs that will uncover synergies and insights that lead to novel collaborations.

The RCCN website supports linkages between the seven NIA center programs and shares center-related resources, funding and meetings opportunities, and webinars.

Managed by Wake Forest University School of Medicine and the American Federation for Aging Research (AFAR), the RCCN spurs multi-disciplinary efforts across the centers through four complementary strategies: workshops, pilot funding, early career investigator education, and career development and research resources.

RCCN Principal Investigator/Director - Wake Forest University School of Medicine

Stephen Kritchevsky, Ph.D.

Stephen Kritchevsky, Ph.D.

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Stephen Kritchevsky, Ph.D. is Professor of Medicine and Translational Science at Wake Forest University School of Medicine where he serves as Director of the Sticht Center for Healthy Aging and Alzheimer’s Prevention, and Wake Forest Claude D. Pepper Older Americans Independence Center. He is also an Associate Director of the Wake Forest Clinical and Translational Science Institute.

RCCN Principal Investigator/Director - AFAR

Stephanie Lederman, M.Ed.

Stephanie Lederman, M.Ed.

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Stephanie Lederman, M.Ed. is the Executive Director of American Federation for Aging Research.