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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
Ray tracing for reconstructive tomography in the presence of object discontinuity boundaries: A comparative analysis of recursive schemes
TL;DR: A comparative analysis of recursive ray tracing strategies for tomographic reconstruction from projections with diffracting sources is presented in this paper, where one algorithm employs ray tracing in reprojection toward a correction of the true projection values for subsequent straight-ray reconstruction.
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fMRI in alert, behaving monkeys: an adaptation of the human infant familiarization novelty preference procedure.
Jane E. Joseph,David K. Powell,Anders H. Andersen,Ramesh S. Bhatt,Michael K. Dunlap,Stephen T. Foldes,Eric Forman,Peter A. Hardy,Nicholas A. Steinmetz,Zhiming Zhang +9 more
TL;DR: The feasibility of using eye movements as an index of visual discrimination in untrained monkeys during fMRI scanning is demonstrated and this methodological approach helps to extend the repertoire of research tools for fMRI in non-human primates.
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Pharmacologic MRI (phMRI) as a tool to differentiate Parkinson's disease–related from age-related changes in basal ganglia function
Anders H. Andersen,Peter A. Hardy,Eric Forman,Greg A. Gerhardt,Don M. Gash,Richard Grondin,Zhiming Zhang +6 more
TL;DR: PhMRI findings in MPTP-lesioned parkinsonian and aged animals suggest that changes in basal ganglia function in the elderly may differ from those seen in parkinsonia patients and that phMRI could be used to distinguish PD from other age-associated functional alterations in the brain.
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Functional magnetic resonance imaging evidence for task-specific activation of developmentally abnormal visual association cortex.
TL;DR: Functional magnetic resonance imaging was performed on a 36‐year‐old woman with muscular dystrophy, intractable epilepsy, and bilateral temporo‐occipital lissencephaly and observed islands of task‐specific activation in lissencesphalic cortex homologous to visual association regions activated in normal subjects on the same visual confrontation naming task.
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Methodology and effects of repeated intranasal delivery of DNSP-11 in awake Rhesus macaques.
Mallory J. Stenslik,A. Evans,Francois Pomerleau,R. Weeks,Peter Huettl,E. Foreman,Jadwiga Turchan-Cholewo,Anders H. Andersen,Wayne A. Cass,Zhiming Zhang,Richard Grondin,Don M. Gash,Greg A. Gerhardt,Luke H. Bradley +13 more
TL;DR: The initial data support that repeated intranasal delivery and dose-escalation of DNSP-11 resulted in bilateral, striatal target engagement based on neurochemical changes in dopamine metabolites-without observable, adverse behavioral effects or weight loss in NHPs.