Dr. Kay completed her doctoral degree in clinical psychology through the neuropsychology track at Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science. She completed her pre-doctoral internship in clinical neuropsychology at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH), which included neuropsychological assessment of patients across the lifespan, as well as safety assessments in the MGH Emergency Department. She completed a two-year post-doctoral fellowship in clinical neuropsychology with the Harvard Partners Consortium, where she trained in adult and geriatric assessment at the MGH Psychology Assessment Center and Brigham and Women’s Hospital Center for Brain/Mind Medicine. She is currently an Instructor at Harvard Medical School and a Clinical Neuropsychologist at the MGH Psychology Assessment Center, where she provides neuropsychological evaluations to diverse adult and geriatric patient populations. She is also the Director of the MGH Neuropsychology Internship Program. Dr. Kay’s clinical expertise includes neuropsychological assessment of individuals with dementia syndromes, movement disorders, stroke/vascular diseases, traumatic brain injury, multiple sclerosis and other white matter diseases, autoimmune diseases, infectious diseases (including long-COVID), functional neurological disorders, and other neuropsychiatric conditions. She has extensive experience in assessment of individuals with comorbid neurological and psychiatric conditions. Dr. Kay’s current research interests include examining long-term cognitive outcomes in autoimmune encephalitis.