D
D Henderson Slater
Researcher at University of Oxford
Publications - 10
Citations - 708
D Henderson Slater is an academic researcher from University of Oxford. The author has contributed to research in topics: Neuroplasticity & Phantom pain. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 9 publications receiving 582 citations. Previous affiliations of D Henderson Slater include Nuffield Orthopaedic Centre.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Phantom pain is associated with preserved structure and function in the former hand area
Tamar R. Makin,Jan Scholz,Nicola Filippini,D Henderson Slater,Irene Tracey,Heidi Johansen-Berg +5 more
TL;DR: It is proposed that contrary to the maladaptive model, cortical plasticity associated with phantom pain is driven by powerful and long-lasting subjective sensory experience, such as triggered by nociceptive or top–down inputs.
Journal ArticleDOI
Reassessing cortical reorganization in the primary sensorimotor cortex following arm amputation
Tamar R. Makin,Jan Scholz,D Henderson Slater,D Henderson Slater,Heidi Johansen-Berg,Irene Tracey +5 more
TL;DR: The brain’s ability to reorganise itself is key to the authors' recovery from injuries, but the subsequent mismatch between old and new organisation may lead to pain, so a ‘maladaptive plasticity’ theory is argued against by showing that phantom pain in upper limb amputees is independent of cortical remapping.
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Deprivation-related and use-dependent plasticity go hand in hand
Tamar R. Makin,Alona O Cramer,Jan Scholz,Avital Hahamy,D Henderson Slater,Irene Tracey,Heidi Johansen-Berg +6 more
TL;DR: It is shown that adaptive patterns of limb usage after amputation drive cortical plasticity, and how experience-driven plasticity in the human brain can transcend boundaries that have been thought to limit reorganisation after sensory deprivation in adults is demonstrated.
Journal ArticleDOI
Network-level reorganisation of functional connectivity following arm amputation.
Tamar R. Makin,Nicola Filippini,Eugene P. Duff,D Henderson Slater,Irene Tracey,Heidi Johansen-Berg +5 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors used resting-state fMRI to identify large-scale reorganisation beyond the primary sensorimotor cortex in arm amputees, compared with two-handed controls.
Journal ArticleDOI
Artificial limb representation in amputees
van den Heiligenberg Fmz.,van den Heiligenberg Fmz.,van den Heiligenberg Fmz.,Tanya Orlov,Scott N. Macdonald,Eugene P. Duff,D Henderson Slater,Christian F. Beckmann,Heidi Johansen-Berg,Jody C. Culham,Tamar R. Makin,Tamar R. Makin +11 more
TL;DR: Study of individuals with congenital or acquired hand-loss using functional MRI shows that prosthesis usage shapes brain activity and connectivity and neural resources can be repurposed to support artificial limbs.