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    Chapter

    Diffusion-Weighted Magnetic Resonance Imaging

    Contrast in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is generated by exploiting a variety of physicochemical properties. Conventional clinical MRI techniques are largely based upon disease-induced changes in water rel...

    Martin King, Nick van Bruggen, Albert Busza in Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy and Imagin… (1997)

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    Chapter

    BOLD Contrast fMRI as a Tool for Imaging Neuroscience

    Since its discovery in 1991 the technique of map** human brain activity by observing changes in cortical blood oxygenation with MRI has blossomed into a methodology of major importance for brain science and ...

    Robert Turner in Complex Medical Engineering (2007)

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    Article

    Speech and song: The role of the cerebellum

    An exploration into cerebellar activity during the perception and production of speech and song may elucidate general underlying cerebellar functions. Recently, the cerebellum has been hypothesized to be invol...

    Daniel E. Callan, Mitsuo Kawato, Lawrence Parsons, Robert Turner in The Cerebellum (2007)

  4. Article

    Open Access

    The functional architecture of S1 during touch observation described with 7 T fMRI

    Recent studies indicate that the primary somatosensory cortex (S1) is active not only when touch is physically perceived but also when it is merely observed to be experienced by another person. This social res...

    Esther Kuehn, Karsten Mueller, Robert Turner in Brain Structure and Function (2014)

  5. Article

    Open Access

    Spatial normalization of ultrahigh resolution 7 T magnetic resonance imaging data of the postmortem human subthalamic nucleus: a multistage approach

    In this paper, we describe a novel processing strategy for the spatial normalization of ultrahigh resolution magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) data of small ex vivo samples into MNI standard space. We present a...

    Marcel Weiss, Anneke Alkemade, Max C. Keuken in Brain Structure and Function (2015)

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    Article

    In favor of general probability distributions: lateral prefrontal and insular cortices respond to stimulus inherent, but irrelevant differences

    A key aspect of optimal behavior is the ability to predict what will come next. To achieve this, we must have a fairly good idea of the probability of occurrence of possible outcomes. This is based both on pri...

    Anna Mestres-Missé, Robert Trampel, Robert Turner in Brain Structure and Function (2016)