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Jin Hyung Lee

Researcher at Stanford University

Publications -  71
Citations -  4197

Jin Hyung Lee is an academic researcher from Stanford University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Optogenetics & Magnetic resonance imaging. The author has an hindex of 26, co-authored 71 publications receiving 3633 citations. Previous affiliations of Jin Hyung Lee include University of California, Los Angeles & University of California.

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FBXO11/PRMT9, a new protein arginine methyltransferase, symmetrically dimethylates arginine residues.

TL;DR: Structurally, this protein is distinct from all other known PRMTs implying that convergent evolution allowed this protein to develop the ability to methylate arginine residues and evolved elements conserved inPRMTs to accomplish this.
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Frequency-selective control of cortical and subcortical networks by central thalamus

TL;DR: This work combined optogenetics, fMRI, electrophysiology, and video-EEG monitoring to characterize the central thalamus-driven global brain networks responsible for switching brain state, and identifies key brain-wide dynamics underlying centralThalamus arousal regulation.
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Synthesis and characterization of PVP-coated large core iron oxide nanoparticles as an MRI contrast agent

TL;DR: PVP-IO nanoparticles are potentially useful for T(2)-weighted MR imaging and are comparable to that of Feridex as measured by a Prussian blue iron stain and phantom study.
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Activation of Direct and Indirect Pathway Medium Spiny Neurons Drives Distinct Brain-wide Responses.

TL;DR: Positive and negative signals within the striatum, thalamus, GPi, and STN were all associated with increases and decreases in single-unit activity, respectively, providing direct evidence for the opposing influence of D1 and D2 receptor-expressing striatal neurons on brain-wide circuitry.
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Fast 3D imaging using variable‐density spiral trajectories with applications to limb perfusion

TL;DR: Variable‐density k‐space sampling using a stack‐of‐spirals trajectory is proposed for ultra fast 3D imaging that significantly reduces scan time while introducing only minor aliasing artifacts from the low‐energy, high‐spatial‐frequency components.