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Habib Benali

Researcher at Concordia University Wisconsin

Publications -  319
Citations -  19016

Habib Benali is an academic researcher from Concordia University Wisconsin. The author has contributed to research in topics: Diffusion MRI & Functional magnetic resonance imaging. The author has an hindex of 67, co-authored 300 publications receiving 15896 citations. Previous affiliations of Habib Benali include Queen Mary University of London & Université de Montréal.

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Traumatic brain injury: integrated approaches to improve prevention, clinical care, and research

Andrew I R Maas, +342 more
- 01 Dec 2017 - 
TL;DR: The InTBIR Participants and Investigators have provided informed consent for the study to take place in Poland.
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Preclinical Alzheimer's disease: Definition, natural history, and diagnostic criteria.

TL;DR: An updated review of the literature and evidence on the definitions and lexicon, the limits, the natural history, the markers of progression, and the ethical consequence of detecting the disease at this asymptomatic stage of Alzheimer's disease are provided.
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Automatic classification of patients with Alzheimer's disease from structural MRI: A comparison of ten methods using the ADNI database

TL;DR: Evaluated the performance of ten high dimensional classification methods proposed to automatically discriminate between patients with Alzheimer's disease or mild cognitive impairment and elderly controls using 509 subjects from the ADNI database, finding whole-brain methods achieved high accuracies and the use of feature selection did not improve the performance but substantially increased the computation times.
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Contributions of the basal ganglia and functionally related brain structures to motor learning.

TL;DR: This review discusses the cerebral plasticity, and the role of the cortico-striatal system in particular, observed as one is learning or planning to execute a newly learned motor behavior up to when the skill is consolidated or has become highly automatized.
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Distinct basal ganglia territories are engaged in early and advanced motor sequence learning

TL;DR: The results suggest the possibility that motor representations shift from the associative to the sensorimotor territories of the striato-pallidal complex during the explicit learning of motor sequences, suggesting that motor skills are stored in the sensorsimotor territory of the basal ganglia that supports a speedy performance.