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Jeffrey T. Duda

Researcher at University of Pennsylvania

Publications -  45
Citations -  4979

Jeffrey T. Duda is an academic researcher from University of Pennsylvania. The author has contributed to research in topics: Diffusion MRI & Normalization (statistics). The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 40 publications receiving 4462 citations. Previous affiliations of Jeffrey T. Duda include Cleveland Clinic & National Institutes of Health.

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In vivo fiber tractography using DT-MRI data

TL;DR: Fiber tract trajectories in coherently organized brain white matter pathways were computed from in vivo diffusion tensor magnetic resonance imaging (DT‐MRI) data, and the method holds promise for elucidating architectural features in other fibrous tissues and ordered media.
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Large-scale evaluation of ANTs and FreeSurfer cortical thickness measurements.

TL;DR: The largest evaluation of automated cortical thickness measures in publicly available data is conducted, comparing FreeSurfer and ANTs measures computed on 1205 images from four open data sets, with parcellation based on the recently proposed Desikan-Killiany-Tourville cortical labeling protocol.
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Associations between children's socioeconomic status and prefrontal cortical thickness.

TL;DR: The results suggest that brain structure in frontal regions may provide a meaningful link between SES and cognitive function among healthy, typically developing children.
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Brain atrophy in relapsing multiple sclerosis: relationship to relapses, EDSS, and treatment with interferon β-1a:

TL;DR: This study focused on a normalized measure of whole brain atrophy, the brain parenchymal fraction (BPF), and observed that change in T2 lesion volume was the disease measure most closely correlated with change in BPF during 2 years of observation, and relapse number and EDSS change during2 years were only weakly correlated with BPF change during the same period.
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Multivariate analysis of structural and diffusion imaging in traumatic brain injury.

TL;DR: SyNMN reveals evidence that TBI compromises the limbic system and suggests that the DT component may aid normalization quality, and is used to study MV effects of traumatic brain injury (TBI).