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Hemant Bokil

Researcher at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Publications -  25
Citations -  2674

Hemant Bokil is an academic researcher from Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory. The author has contributed to research in topics: Local field potential & Brain atlas. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 23 publications receiving 2298 citations.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Chronux: a platform for analyzing neural signals.

TL;DR: The current version of Chronux includes software for signal processing of neural time-series data including several specialized mini-packages for spike-sorting, local regression, audio segmentation, and other data-analysis tasks typically encountered by a neuroscientist.
Book

Observed Brain Dynamics

TL;DR: This volume addresses the need for a textbook in this interdisciplinary area of neuroscience and is written for a broad spectrum of readers ranging from physical scientists, mathematicians, and statisticians wishing to educate themselves about neuroscience, to biologists who would like to learn time series analysis methods in particular and refresh their mathematical and statistical knowledge in general.
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An anatomic gene expression atlas of the adult mouse brain.

TL;DR: The Anatomic Gene Expression Atlas (AGEA) is a new relational atlas revealing the genetic architecture of the adult C57Bl/6J mouse brain based on spatial correlations across expression data for thousands of genes in the Allen Brain Atlas (ABA).
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A Proposal for a Coordinated Effort for the Determination of Brainwide Neuroanatomical Connectivity in Model Organisms at a Mesoscopic Scale

TL;DR: A concerted effort is advocated for a concerted effort to fill this gap, through systematic, experimental mapping of neural circuits at a mesoscopic scale of resolution suitable for comprehensive, brainwide coverage, using injections of tracers or viral vectors.
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The brain atlas concordance problem: quantitative comparison of anatomical parcellations.

TL;DR: An analytical framework is developed for studying this brain atlas concordance problem, and the complexity of the spatial overlap patterns revealed points to problems for attempts to reconcile anatomical parcellations and nomenclatures using strictly qualitative and/or categorical methods.