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Dimitri Papadopoulos-Orfanos

Researcher at Université Paris-Saclay

Publications -  34
Citations -  1597

Dimitri Papadopoulos-Orfanos is an academic researcher from Université Paris-Saclay. The author has contributed to research in topics: Gyrus & Voxel-based morphometry. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 34 publications receiving 1432 citations. Previous affiliations of Dimitri Papadopoulos-Orfanos include Commissariat à l'énergie atomique et aux énergies alternatives & French Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission.

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A framework to study the cortical folding patterns.

TL;DR: A framework of using artificial neuroanatomists that are trained to identify sulci from a database is developed, which relies on a renormalization of the brain warping problem, which consists in matching the cortices at the scale of the folds.
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Automatic recognition of cortical sulci of the human brain using a congregation of neural networks.

TL;DR: A complete system allowing automatic recognition of the main sulci of the human cortex, which relies on a preprocessing of magnetic resonance images leading to abstract structural representations of the cortical folding patterns.
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Object-based morphometry of the cerebral cortex

TL;DR: This study reveals some correlates of handedness on the size of the sulci located in motor areas, which was not detected previously using standard voxel based morphometry.
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A primal sketch of the cortex mean curvature: a morphogenesis based approach to study the variability of the folding patterns

TL;DR: A new representation of the cortical surface that may be used to study the cortex folding process and to recover some putative stable anatomical landmarks called sulcal roots usually buried in the depth of adult brains is proposed.
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A generic framework for the parcellation of the cortical surface into gyri using geodesic Voronoı̈ diagrams

TL;DR: A generic automatic approach for the parcellation of the cortical surface into labeled gyri defined from a set of pairs of sulci selected by the user, illustrated with 12 different hemispheres.