G
George Paxinos
Researcher at University of New South Wales
Publications - 255
Citations - 99777
George Paxinos is an academic researcher from University of New South Wales. The author has contributed to research in topics: Spinal cord & Receptor. The author has an hindex of 68, co-authored 250 publications receiving 96361 citations. Previous affiliations of George Paxinos include Curtin University & St George's Hospital.
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Book ChapterDOI
Organization of Brainstem Nuclei
TL;DR: This chapter presents a classification of the human brainstem structures, including most of neuronal cell groups in thehuman brainstem, as well as attempts to extend to the human the overall organizational schemata that have been proposed for the brainstem of other mammalian species.
Journal ArticleDOI
Segmentation of the mouse hippocampal formation in magnetic resonance images
Kay L. Richards,Charles Watson,Rachel F. Buckley,Rachel F. Buckley,Nyoman D. Kurniawan,Zhengyi Yang,Marianne D. Keller,Richard Beare,Richard Beare,Perry F. Bartlett,Gary F. Egan,Gary F. Egan,Graham J. Galloway,George Paxinos,George Paxinos,George Paxinos,Steven Petrou,Steven Petrou,David C. Reutens +18 more
TL;DR: A guide for segmenting over 40 structures in an adult mouse brain using 30 μm isotropic resolution images acquired with a 16.4 T MR imaging system and combined using super-resolution reconstruction is developed.
Journal ArticleDOI
Dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus nerve: A cyto- and chemoarchitectonic study in the human
TL;DR: In order to investigate the topography and subdivisions of the human dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus nerve, studies were conducted using cyto‐ and chemoarchitectonic (acetylcholinesterase and substance P‐like immunoreactivity) and computer reconstruction techniques.
Journal ArticleDOI
Angiotensin receptor binding in human hypothalamus: autoradiographic localization.
TL;DR: Binding of 125I-[Sar1,Ile8]angiotensin II in the human hypothalamus was mapped by in vitro autoradiography carried out on frozen sections of hypothalamus from two human brains as discussed by the authors.