Current vestibular rehabilitation intervenes upon vestibular impairments (balance, gaze stability, and dizziness). Activity and participation are reduced in people with vestibulopathy, but are not addressed in vestibular rehabilitation protocols. Approximately 40% of people with vestibulopathy do not fully recover and transition to a state of chronic disability, which often results from reductions in activity and participation, and. Evidence from rehabilitation science within other populations suggest that return to full activity and participation is related to functional mobility status, and also several behavioral, personal, and environmental factors. Similarly, we suspect that cognitive, mood, and personal (confidence, coping, and fear avoidance) factors that are modifiable, may impact activity and participation in people with vestibulopathy. It is also unknown whether improvements in activity and participation are related to remediation of impairments following vestibular rehabilitation. Activity and participation represent important domains to target to optimize outcomes and reduce chronic disability. This career development award will establish Dr. Brooke Klatt as a clinical scientist with expertise in 3 primary domains: (1) cohort design and analysis; (2) qualitative methodology, and (3) complex rehabilitation intervention development and behavioral clinical trial methodology. Dr. Klatt has assembled a multi-disciplinary team of experts in rehabilitation intervention development and implementation (Jennifer Brach, PhD, PT and Elizabeth Skidmore, PhD, OTR/L), activity and participation assessment and epidemiological methods (Andrea Rosso, PhD, MPH), behavioral impacts on vestibular recovery (Jeffrey Staab, MD), and clinical trial methodology (Megan Hamm, PhD and Charity Patterson, PhD, MSPH). Dr. Klatt will conduct a series of studies to develop an enhanced vestibular intervention that will augment current vestibular rehabilitation targeted to improve activity and participation. She will investigate whether impairments (balance, gait, gaze stability, dizziness, cognition, and mood) as well as personal factors (confidence, coping skills, and fear avoidance) are related to activity and participation in people with vestibulopathy (Aim 1), and she will determine if reductions in vestibular impairment is related to improvements in activity and participation (Aim 2). She will use stakeholder input from clinicians and patients to determine the delivery features that show the greatest promise for improving activity and participation in people with vestibulopathy (Aim 3). Dr. Klatt’s is plan to develop effective interventions to enhance current vestibular rehabilitation addresses the NCMRR research priorities to mitigate acquisition of secondary conditions by using a multimodal approach to promote vestibular plasticity and sensorimotor function. The proposed training will be the foundation for a future R01 application examining the efficacy of the e...