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Dongrong Xu

Researcher at Columbia University

Publications -  109
Citations -  4745

Dongrong Xu is an academic researcher from Columbia University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Diffusion MRI & Fractional anisotropy. The author has an hindex of 29, co-authored 105 publications receiving 4061 citations. Previous affiliations of Dongrong Xu include University of York & Columbia University Medical Center.

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Sex Differences in Cortical Thickness Mapped in 176 Healthy Individuals between 7 and 87 Years of Age

TL;DR: The results suggest that greater cortical thickness in posterior temporal inferior parietal regions in females relative to males are independent of differences in brain or body size, and help to address controversies in the study of central nervous system sexual dimorphisms.
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Voxel-based morphometry using the RAVENS maps: methods and validation using simulated longitudinal atrophy.

TL;DR: The RAVENS methodology was found to accurately determine the regions of atrophy, despite their localized nature and the interindividual variability of cortical structures, and to perform substantially better than the voxel-based morphology method of SPM'99.
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Review of spectral imaging technology in biomedical engineering: achievements and challenges

TL;DR: This review introduces the basics of spectral imaging, imaging methods, current equipment, and recent advances in biomedical applications and highlights the benefits and development trends of biomedical spectral imaging.
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Thinning of sensorimotor cortices in children with Tourette syndrome.

TL;DR: Using magnetic resonance imaging, cortical thinning in frontal and parietal lobes in groups of Tourette syndrome children relative to controls was detected, most prominent in ventral portions of the sensory and motor homunculi that control the facial, orolingual and laryngeal musculature that is commonly involved in tic symptoms.
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Association of Cerebral Networks in Resting State with Sexual Preference of Homosexual Men: A Study of Regional Homogeneity and Functional Connectivity

TL;DR: Differences in regional homogeneity and functional connectivity in the resting state may contribute to a better understanding of the neural basis of male sexual orientation.