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Borjan Gagoski

Researcher at Boston Children's Hospital

Publications -  104
Citations -  4269

Borjan Gagoski is an academic researcher from Boston Children's Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Iterative reconstruction. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 88 publications receiving 3452 citations. Previous affiliations of Borjan Gagoski include Harvard University & Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

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Blipped-controlled aliasing in parallel imaging for simultaneous multislice echo planar imaging with reduced g-factor penalty.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors introduce a method to create interslice image shifts in the phase encoding direction to increase the distance between aliasing pixels, induced using sign-and amplitude-modulated slice-select gradient blips simultaneous with the EPI phase encoding blips.
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Improving diffusion MRI using simultaneous multi-slice echo planar imaging.

TL;DR: It is shown that data acquisition times for Q-ball and diffusion spectrum imaging (DSI) can be reduced 3-fold with a minor loss in SNR and with similar diffusion results compared to conventional acquisitions.
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Magnitude least squares optimization for parallel radio frequency excitation design demonstrated at 7 Tesla with eight channels.

TL;DR: This work demonstrates a method for a magnitude least squares optimization of the target magnetization profile for multichannel parallel excitation to improve the magnitude profile and reduce the RF power at the cost of a less uniform phase profile.
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Wave-CAIPI for highly accelerated 3D imaging

TL;DR: To introduce the wave‐CAIPI (controlled aliasing in parallel imaging) acquisition and reconstruction technique for highly accelerated 3D imaging with negligible g‐factor and artifact penalties.
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Parallel RF transmission with eight channels at 3 Tesla.

TL;DR: Spatially selective RF waveforms were designed and demonstrated for parallel excitation with a dedicated eight‐coil transmit array on a modified 3T human MRI scanner and experimental results were in excellent agreement with simulations based on the measured coil maps.