J
Jonathan Kaiser
Researcher at Harvard University
Publications - 8
Citations - 1088
Jonathan Kaiser is an academic researcher from Harvard University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder & Cerebral cortex. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 7 publications receiving 994 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Cortical Thinning of the Attention and Executive Function Networks in Adults with Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder
Nikos Makris,Joseph Biederman,Eve M. Valera,George Bush,Jonathan Kaiser,David N. Kennedy,Verne S. Caviness,Stephen V. Faraone,Larry J. Seidman,Larry J. Seidman +9 more
TL;DR: This is the first documentation that ADHD in adults is associated with thinner cortex in the cortical networks that modulate attention and EF, and this network is located in the right hemisphere involving the inferior parietal lobule, the dorsolateral prefrontal, and the anterior cingulate cortices.
Journal ArticleDOI
Delineation of the Middle Longitudinal Fascicle in Humans: A Quantitative, In Vivo, DT-MRI Study
Nikos Makris,Nikos Makris,George Papadimitriou,Jonathan Kaiser,Scott F. Sorg,David N. Kennedy,Deepak N. Pandya +6 more
TL;DR: The trajectory of the middle longitudinal fascicle (MdLF) has been delineated in 4 human subjects using diffusion tensor magnetic resonance imaging segmentation and tractography to suggest that MdLF could have a role in language and attention functions.
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Gray Matter Alterations in Adults with Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder Identified by Voxel Based Morphometry
Larry J. Seidman,Joseph Biederman,Lichen Liang,Eve M. Valera,Eve M. Valera,Michael C. Monuteaux,Ariel Brown,Ariel Brown,Jonathan Kaiser,Thomas J. Spencer,Stephen V. Faraone,Stephen V. Faraone,Nikos Makris +12 more
TL;DR: Adults with ADHD have subtle volume reductions in the caudate and possibly other brain regions involved in attention and executive control supporting frontostriatal models of ADHD.
Journal ArticleDOI
Cortical thickness abnormalities in cocaine addiction--a reflection of both drug use and a pre-existing disposition to drug abuse?
Nikos Makris,Gregory P. Gasic,David N. Kennedy,Steven M. Hodge,Jonathan Kaiser,Myung Joo Lee,Byoung Woo Kim,Anne J. Blood,A. Eden Evins,Larry J. Seidman,Larry J. Seidman,Dan V. Iosifescu,Sang Lee,Claudia Baxter,Roy H. Perlis,Jordan W. Smoller,Maurizio Fava,Hans C. Breiter +17 more
TL;DR: Comparing the thickness of neocortical and paralimbic brain regions between cocaine-dependent and matched control subjects found that four of 18 a priori regions involved with executive regulation of reward and attention were significantly thinner in addicts, suggesting one basis for restricted behavioral repertoires in drug dependence.
Journal ArticleDOI
MRI-based anatomical model of the human head for specific absorption rate mapping
Nikos Makris,Nikos Makris,Leonardo M. Angelone,Leonardo M. Angelone,Seann Tulloch,Scott F. Sorg,Jonathan Kaiser,David N. Kennedy,Giorgio Bonmassar +8 more
TL;DR: A magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-based, high-resolution, numerical model of the head of a healthy human subject is presented, using T1-weighted MRI to study individual thin anatomical structures of clinical relevance not visible by the standard model currently adopted in computational bioelectromagnetics.