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Judd M. Storrs

Researcher at University of Mississippi Medical Center

Publications -  18
Citations -  440

Judd M. Storrs is an academic researcher from University of Mississippi Medical Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Imaging phantom & Talairach coordinates. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 17 publications receiving 376 citations. Previous affiliations of Judd M. Storrs include University of Cincinnati Academic Health Center & University of Cincinnati.

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Journal ArticleDOI

A comparison of manual tracing and FreeSurfer for estimating hippocampal volume over the adult lifespan.

TL;DR: FreeSurfer saves time and money, and approximates the same atrophy measures as manual tracing, but it introduces biases that could require statistical adjustments in some studies, and FreeSurfer consistently reports larger volumes than manual tracing.
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Changes in white matter integrity follow excitatory rTMS treatment of post-stroke aphasia.

TL;DR: Overall, left-hemispheric regions that showed increased FA corresponded to areas previously shown to have increases in fMRI language activation after iTBS, suggesting increased white matter integrity near the stimulation sites may reflect improvements in cortical function mediated by excitatory rTMS through its ability to facilitate synaptic connections.
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Detecting brain structural changes as biomarker from magnetic resonance images using a local feature based SVM approach.

TL;DR: A novel local feature based support vector machine (SVM) approach to detect brain structural changes as potential biomarkers that will be a promising tool for assisting automatic diagnosis and advancing mechanism studies of neurological and psychiatric diseases.
Patent

Automated neuroaxis (brain and spine) imaging with iterative scan prescriptions, analysis, reconstructions, labeling, surface localization and guided intervention

TL;DR: In this article, a self-adhesive spatial reference and skin marking system is used to identify vertebrae and discs even in the presence of abnormalities, and a spine autoprescription process performs image analysis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Physiologic and cortical response to acute psychosocial stress in left temporal lobe epilepsy — A pilot cross-sectional fMRI study

TL;DR: This study is the first to characterize the cortical and physiologic responses to acute psychosocial stress and to show a significant relationship between seizure control in LTLE and both the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis and fMRI signal reactivity to acute psychology stress.