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G A Press

Researcher at University of California, San Diego

Publications -  49
Citations -  7156

G A Press is an academic researcher from University of California, San Diego. The author has contributed to research in topics: Magnetic resonance imaging & Cerebellum. The author has an hindex of 34, co-authored 49 publications receiving 6942 citations. Previous affiliations of G A Press include Kaiser Permanente & Boston Children's Hospital.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Hypoplasia of Cerebellar Vermal Lobules VI and VII in Autism

TL;DR: In patients with autism, neocerebellar abnormality may directly impair cognitive functions that some investigators have attributed to the neoceebellum; may indirectly affect the development and functioning of one or more systems involved in cognitive, sensory, autonomic, and motor activities.
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Normal brain development and aging: quantitative analysis at in vivo MR imaging in healthy volunteers

TL;DR: In this article, the authors quantitatively quantitate neuroanatomic parameters in healthy volunteers and compare the values with normative values from postmortem studies, using MRI images of 116 volunteers aged 19 months to 80 years.

Normal Brain Development and Aging: Quantitative Analysis at in Vivo MR Imaging in Healthy

TL;DR: MR images accurately depict normal patterns of age-related change in intracranial space, whole brain, GM, WM, and CSF, and these quantitative MR imaging data can be used in research studies and clinical settings for the detection of abnormalities in fundamental neuroanatomic parameters.
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The effect of hemodynamically significant carotid artery disease on the hemodynamic status of the cerebral circulation.

TL;DR: A significant relationship was found between the PET measurements of cerebral hemodynamics and the arteriographic circulation pattern and the role of hemodynamic factors in the pathogenesis and treatment of cerebrovascular disease cannot be determined from the severity of carotid artery disease alone.
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Hippocampal abnormalities in amnesic patients revealed by high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging

TL;DR: A high-resolution protocol for imaging the human hippocampus with magnetic resonance is developed that permits visualization of the hippocampal formation in substantial cytoarchitectonic detail, revealing abnormalities in patients with severe and selective memory impairment.