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Joel Welling

Researcher at Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center

Publications -  42
Citations -  1475

Joel Welling is an academic researcher from Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Visualization & Supply chain. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 42 publications receiving 1349 citations. Previous affiliations of Joel Welling include University of Pittsburgh & Carnegie Mellon University.

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Functional brain abnormalities are related to clinical recovery and time to return-to-play in athletes

TL;DR: This study found that abnormal fMRI results during the first week of recovery predicted clinical recovery, and athletes who demonstrated hyperactivation on fMRI scans at the time of their first fMRI scan demonstrated a more prolonged clinical recovery.
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Pursuit and Saccadic Eye Movement Subregions in Human Frontal Eye Field: A High-resolution fMRI Investigation

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used fMRI with high spatial resolution image acquisition at 3.0 Tesla to map the saccade- and pursuit-related areas of frontal eye field within the two walls of the precentral sulcus in 11 subjects.
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Null cone computation of gravitational radiation

TL;DR: In this paper, a null cone formulation of axially symmetric gravitational and matter fields is used for the production of gravitational waves, both analytically and numerically, using a single conformally compactified patch, which is well suited for numerical computation.
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The impact of making vaccines thermostable in Niger's vaccine supply chain

TL;DR: Making any EPI vaccine thermostable relieved existing supply chain bottlenecks, increased vaccine availability of all EPI vaccines, and decreased cold storage and transport capacity utilization.
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Postconcussive symptoms are associated with compensatory cortical recruitment during a working memory task.

TL;DR: Examination of the association between self-reported symptom severity and functional activation on a working memory task in a group of 16 recently concussed student athletes indicates that functional neuroimaging may have the potential to serve as a biomarker of the severity of concussion and mild traumatic brain injury.