• The latest ISL Newsletter now available

    Read about ISL News and More!

    READ THE NEWSLETTER
  • Design for Maintenance

    New Blog post by the Director of ISL

    READ MORE
  • ISL researchers part of $14.7-million grant

    The team will explore how technology can support older adults

    READ MORE
  • ISL Lecture Series Recording

    Did you miss the lecture with aging and technology expert, Dr. Kaye?

    WATCH HERE
  • Watch Zhe He's Brown Bag Talk

    He addresses "Using Informatics and AI to Support Older Adults’ Comprehension of Lab Test Results"

    WATCH THE VIDEO
  • Faculty Affiliate appointed

    Leo Liu, Ph.D., was appointed by the International Society of Thrombosis and Hemostasis (ISTH) as the Co-Chair of Scientific and Standardization Committee (SSC) on Biorheology

    Read more here
  • ISL welcomes new affiliate

    Dr. Kyle Smith is an Assistant Professor in Sports Nutrition at FSU's College of Education, Health, and Human Sciences

    Read more here
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The Institute for Successful Longevity conducts research into how to live longer, stay active and be fully engaged in life. The institute takes a multidisciplinary approach to better explore the complexities of life as an older individual.

Over the last century Americans witnessed tremendous gains in longevity, but successful longevity is more than living to a great, old age. It is about living well as we grow older.

Living well means many things, so we draw on the talents of researchers in many fields across the Florida State University campus to look at health, cognition, recreation, mobility, financial security and other concerns.

In the past, aging was seen as a problem, a condition or malady. Today at FSU’s Institute for Successful Longevity, we see aging as a natural stage of life, and our researchers look at all the components of an older person’s experience as we pursue the causes of age-related cognitive and physical decline and translate those discoveries into practices and interventions that slow or halt these changes.

Our Goals


To understand the mechanisms of age-associated disorders and functional and cognitive declines.


To develop the best holistic interventions to counter those declines.

 

To disseminate this knowledge to the community, to aging adults and to their care-givers.


To cultivate the scientific, social, and political leadership on this issue that will engage the nation.


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