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Emery N. Brown

Researcher at Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Publications -  599
Citations -  37710

Emery N. Brown is an academic researcher from Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Burst suppression & Spike train. The author has an hindex of 89, co-authored 571 publications receiving 32588 citations. Previous affiliations of Emery N. Brown include Boston University & United States Department of Veterans Affairs.

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Disruption of thalamic functional connectivity is a neural correlate of dexmedetomidine-induced unconsciousness

TL;DR: It is reported that loss of thalamo-cortical functional connectivity is sufficient to produce unconsciousness and recovery from this state was associated with sustained reduction in cerebral blood flow and restored DMN thalamic functional connectivity.
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Locally Regularized Spatiotemporal Modeling and Model Comparison for Functional MRI

TL;DR: This work treats fMRI data analysis as a spatiotemporal system identification problem and addresses issues of model formulation, estimation, and model comparison, presenting a new model that includes a physiologically based hemodynamic response and an empirically derived low-frequency noise model.
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Neural oscillations demonstrate that general anesthesia and sedative states are neurophysiologically distinct from sleep.

TL;DR: The differences between anesthesia- and sleep-induced altered states from the perspective of neural oscillations are discussed, including the three stages of non-rapid eye movement sleep.
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Thalamocortical synchronization during induction and emergence from propofol-induced unconsciousness

TL;DR: In vivo evidence in rats that alpha oscillations induced by the commonly used anesthetic drug propofol are synchronized between the thalamus and the medial prefrontal cortex is provided, advancing understanding of anesthesia-induced unconsciousness and altered arousal and further establish principled neurophysiological markers of these states.
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Circadian rhythms of women with fibromyalgia

TL;DR: Although pain and stiffness were significantly increased in women with fibromyalgia compared with healthy women, there were no circadian rhythms in either parameter, suggesting that abnormalities in circadian rhythmicity are not a primary cause of fibromy arthritis or its symptoms.