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Kenneth K. Kwong

Researcher at Harvard University

Publications -  171
Citations -  28028

Kenneth K. Kwong is an academic researcher from Harvard University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Visual cortex & Magnetic resonance imaging. The author has an hindex of 66, co-authored 167 publications receiving 26652 citations. Previous affiliations of Kenneth K. Kwong include McLean Hospital & Ottawa Hospital Research Institute.

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The Challenge of Connecting the Dots in the B.R.A.I.N

Anna Devor, +54 more
- 16 Oct 2013 - 
TL;DR: The collective vision for what the human brain and mind can achieve within a decade with properly targeted efforts and likely technological deliverables and neuroscience progress is outlined.
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Monitoring acupuncture effects on human brain by FMRI.

TL;DR: Functional MRI is used to study the effects of acupuncture on the BOLD response and the functional connectivity of the human brain and results demonstrate that acupuncture mobilizes a limbic-paralimbic-neocortical network and its anti-correlated sensorimotor/paralimic network at multiple levels of the brain.
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Saccadic suppression induces focal hypooxygenation in the occipital cortex

TL;DR: A focal hypooxygenation in the human visual cortex dependent on the saccade-frequency in an acoustically triggered saccades paradigm is observed, interpreted as evidence that an excessive increase in cerebral blood flow (CBF) over the increase in CMRO2 during decreased neuronal activity CBF, is more reduced than oxygen delivery.
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Measurement of human myocardial perfusion by double-gated flow alternating inversion recovery EPI

TL;DR: Although the current signal‐to‐noise ratio limits the ability to measure small fluctuations in resting flow accurately, the results indicate that this noninvasive method has great promise for the quantitative assessment of myocardial flow reserve in humans.
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Non-invasive in vivo mapping of tumour vascular and interstitial volume fractions

TL;DR: A dual tracer nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) technique to map the tumour vascular and interstitial volume fraction non-invasively in vivo is investigated and values derived from in vivo studies show tumoral VVF and IVF values that are consistent with histology data and literature values.