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Anders H. Andersen
Researcher at University of Kentucky
Publications - 73
Citations - 5866
Anders H. Andersen is an academic researcher from University of Kentucky. The author has contributed to research in topics: Functional magnetic resonance imaging & Dopaminergic. The author has an hindex of 34, co-authored 72 publications receiving 5426 citations. Previous affiliations of Anders H. Andersen include Purdue University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Dopaminergic modulation of memory and affective processing in Parkinson depression
Lee X. Blonder,John T. Slevin,John T. Slevin,Richard J. Kryscio,Catherine A. Martin,Anders H. Andersen,Charles D. Smith,Frederick A. Schmitt +7 more
TL;DR: In all cases, depressed Parkinson's patients performed significantly more poorly while on dopaminergic medication than while off, while the opposite pattern emerged for the non-depressed Parkinson's group.
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Dopaminergic Modulation of Medial Prefrontal Cortex Deactivation in Parkinson Depression
Anders H. Andersen,Charles D. Smith,John T. Slevin,Richard J. Kryscio,Catherine A. Martin,Frederick A. Schmitt,Lee X. Blonder +6 more
TL;DR: Results indicate that dopaminergic medications have opposite effects in the prefrontal cortex depending upon depression status, and may promote increased attention to external visual stimuli among dPD patients but impede normal suppression of DMN activity during external stimulation among ndPD patients.
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Objectively measuring effects of electro-acupuncture in parkinsonian rhesus monkeys.
Rui Zhang,Anders H. Andersen,Peter A. Hardy,Eric Forman,April Evans,Yi Ai,Jin Yue,Guihua Yue,Don M. Gash,Richard Grondin,Zhiming Zhang +10 more
TL;DR: The results demonstrated that chronic EA treatments could significantly improve the movement speed and the fine motor performance time during the period of EA treatments, and the effectiveness of EA could be detected even 3 months after the EA treatment.
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Aging influences the neural correlates of lexical decision but not automatic semantic priming
TL;DR: This paper explored the functional neuroanatomic bases of these frequently observed behavioral findings and found that older adults are slower to perform lexical decisions than young adults but show similar reaction time gains when these decisions are primed semantically.
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Partial least squares as a target-directed structure-seeking technique
TL;DR: It turns out that this is a very natural use of PLS, one that emerges as preferable to the standard approach that employs a least-squares fit of selected component directions to the kinetic target in kinetic studies.