H
Hans-Wilhelm Müller-Gärtner
Researcher at University of Düsseldorf
Publications - 66
Citations - 4291
Hans-Wilhelm Müller-Gärtner is an academic researcher from University of Düsseldorf. The author has contributed to research in topics: Functional magnetic resonance imaging & Auditory cortex. The author has an hindex of 34, co-authored 66 publications receiving 4184 citations. Previous affiliations of Hans-Wilhelm Müller-Gärtner include Forschungszentrum Jülich.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Markov random field segmentation of brain MR images
Karsten Held,Elena Rota Kops,Bernd J. Krause,Iii. W.M. Wells,Ron Kikinis,Hans-Wilhelm Müller-Gärtner +5 more
TL;DR: In this article, a fully-automatic 3D-segmentation technique for brain magnetic resonance (MR) images is described. And the impact of noise, inhomogeneity, smoothing, and structure thickness are analyzed quantitatively.
Journal ArticleDOI
Differential amygdala activation in schizophrenia during sadness.
Frank Schneider,Ute Weiss,Christoph Kessler,Jasmin B. Salloum,Stefan Posse,Wolfgang Grodd,Hans-Wilhelm Müller-Gärtner +6 more
TL;DR: Functional magnetic resonance imaging was utilized to examine brain activity in subcortical and cortical regions of 13 medicated male schizophrenic patients and 13 matched healthy controls during happy and sad mood induction to provide new evidence of functional abnormalities in the limbic system.
Journal ArticleDOI
Neurophysiological correlates of the recognition of facial expressions of emotion as revealed by magnetoencephalography.
Marcus Streit,Andreas A. Ioannides,Lichan Liu,Wolfgang Wölwer,Jürgen Dammers,Joachim Gross,Wolfgang Gaebel,Hans-Wilhelm Müller-Gärtner +7 more
TL;DR: It is found that faces evoked different MEG responses as a function of task demands, i.e., the activations recorded during facial emotion recognition were different from those recorded during simple face recognition in the control task.
Journal ArticleDOI
Subcortical correlates of differential classical conditioning of aversive emotional reactions in social phobia.
Frank Schneider,Ute Weiss,Christoph Kessler,Hans-Wilhelm Müller-Gärtner,Stefan Posse,Jasmin B. Salloum,Wolfgang Grodd,Frank Himmelmann,Wolfgang Gaebel,Niels Birbaumer +9 more
TL;DR: In this article, brain activity was studied in subcortical and cortical regions involved in the processing of negative affect during differential aversive classical conditioning, with phobic patients differing from control subjects.
Journal ArticleDOI
Differential magnetic resonance signal change in human sensorimotor cortex to finger movements of different rate of the dominant and subdominant hand.
Lutz Jäncke,Michael Peters,Gottfried Schlaug,Stefan Posse,H. Steinmetz,Hans-Wilhelm Müller-Gärtner +5 more
TL;DR: Functional magnetic resonance tomography analysis of unimanual and bimanual sequential movements in righthanders showed the following effects: a rate-dependent activation of the somato-motor cortex was confirmed, with faster movement rates producing higher activation both in terms of signal intensity and number of activated voxels.