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Título de Acceso Abierto

NeuroImage

Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial en inglés
NeuroImage, a Journal of Brain Function, provides a vehicle for communicating important advances in the use of neuroimaging to study structure-function and brain-behavior relationships. Though the emphasis is on the macroscopic level of human brain organization, meso-and microscopic neuroimaging across all species will be considered if they provide advances that are of relevance to a systems-level understanding of the human brain.

The main criterion on which papers are judged for NeuroImage, is to what extent the scientific contribution helps advance our understanding of brain function, organization, and structure. NeuroImage, also welcomes papers that explicitly address these questions in animal models or clinical populations. Papers that do not contain significant methodological development, and whose major contribution is to use imaging to advance the understanding of pathology, abnormal development, use of biomarkers or other questions of clinical utility should be referred to NeuroImage: Clinical.

NeuroImage, publishes original research articles, papers on methods, models of brain function, as well as positions on contentious issues. The journal strives to incorporate theoretical and technological innovations and is committed to publishing the highest quality papers in both print and electronic media. The editors and the editorial board members come from highly diverse specialties, reflecting the fact that imaging neuroscience is a multi-disciplinary science.

Submitted papers will generally be considered under eight general themes. However, papers with the above criteria that do not easily fit into any of the below themes will also be handled by an editor with the appropriate expertise.

• Analysis Methods
• Functional MRI Acquisition and Physics
• Computational Modeling and Analysis
• Anatomy and Physiology
• Cognition and Aging
• Social Neuroscience
• Sensorimotor Processing
• Communication, Language, and Learning
Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial

neuroimaging; neuroscience; human brain organisation; brain function

Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Período Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada desde ago. 1992 / hasta dic. 2019 ScienceDirect
No requiere desde ene. 2020 / hasta nov. 2024 ScienceDirect acceso abierto

Información

Tipo de recurso:

revistas

ISSN impreso

1053-8119

ISSN electrónico

1095-9572

Editor responsable

Elsevier

Idiomas de la publicación

  • inglés

País de edición

Estados Unidos

Fecha de publicación

Información sobre licencias CC

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/

Tabla de contenidos

Structural MRI abnormalities in schizophrenic patients and their unaffected siblings: voxel-based morphometry

Andreas Meyer-Lindenberg; Shruti Japee; Beth Verchinski; Philip Kohn; Michael Egan; Lew Bigelow; Joseph Callicott; Alessandro Bertolino; Venkata Mattay; K.F. Berman; Daniel Weinberger

Palabras clave: Cognitive Neuroscience; Neurology.

Pp. S217

Differences between pop-out and effortful visual search in human brain activation: An fMRI mapping study

T.G. Zhou; H.Y. Rao; C. Zhou; K. Zhou; M. Chen; W.C. Wang; Y. Zhou; L. Chen

Palabras clave: Cognitive Neuroscience; Neurology.

Pp. S45

Optimal experimental design of event-related fMRI considering nonlinearity in BOLD response: Theory and experiment

Hong Pan; Yihong Yang; Wolfgang Engelien; David A. Silbersweig; Emily Stern

Palabras clave: Cognitive Neuroscience; Neurology.

Pp. S681

Surefit: Software for segmenting the cerebral cortex and generating surface reconstructions

Heather A. Drury; David C. Van Essen; Charles H. Anderson

Palabras clave: Cognitive Neuroscience; Neurology.

Pp. S914

3D maps of cortical gray matter concentration in schizophrenic and normal populations

K.L. Narr; P.M. Thompson; T. Sharma; J. Moussai; R. Krupp; S. Jang; M. Khaledy; A.W. Toga

Palabras clave: Cognitive Neuroscience; Neurology.

Pp. S218

Characterizing the single-subject stimulus frequency dependence in human visual cortex by carbon-10 dioxide and PET

I. Law; M. Jensen; S. Holm; R.J. Nickles; O.B. Paulson

Palabras clave: Cognitive Neuroscience; Neurology.

Pp. S450

When and where are components independent? On the applicability of spatial- and temporal- ICA to functional MRI data

Vince Calhoun; James Pekar

Palabras clave: Cognitive Neuroscience; Neurology.

Pp. S682

Brainstorm beta release: a Matlab software package for MEG signal processing and source localization and visualization

Sylvain Baillet; John C. Mosher; Richard M. Leahy

Palabras clave: Cognitive Neuroscience; Neurology.

Pp. S915

Quantitative measurement of the superior temporal gyrus comparing male schizophrenic to normal subjects — New results in a MRI-study

A. Marcuse; E.M. Meisenzahl; G. Leinsinger; D. Heiss; U. Hegerl; H.-J. Möller

Palabras clave: Cognitive Neuroscience; Neurology.

Pp. S219

Functional MRI with intermolecular multiple quantum coherences

Wolfgang Richter; Marlene Richter; Warren Warren; Hellmut Merkle; Gregor Adriany; Peter Andersen; Kamil Ugurbil

Palabras clave: Cognitive Neuroscience; Neurology.

Pp. S451