scispace - formally typeset
L

Lars T. Westlye

Researcher at University of Oslo

Publications -  473
Citations -  25065

Lars T. Westlye is an academic researcher from University of Oslo. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Cognition. The author has an hindex of 68, co-authored 398 publications receiving 18911 citations. Previous affiliations of Lars T. Westlye include Indiana University & University of California, San Diego.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Subcortical brain volume abnormalities in 2028 individuals with schizophrenia and 2540 healthy controls via the ENIGMA consortium

T.G.M. van Erp, +66 more
- 01 Apr 2016 - 
TL;DR: Worldwide cooperative analyses of brain imaging data support a profile of subcortical abnormalities in schizophrenia, which is consistent with that based on traditional meta-analytic approaches, and validates that collaborative data analyses can readily be used across brain phenotypes and disorders.
Journal ArticleDOI

Brain Maturation in Adolescence and Young Adulthood: Regional Age-Related Changes in Cortical Thickness and White Matter Volume and Microstructure

TL;DR: The results indicate that cortical thinning in adolescence cannot be explained by WM maturation in underlying regions as measured by volumetry or DTI, and that the integration of the 3 measures will yield a more complete understanding of brain maturation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Common genetic variants influence human subcortical brain structures.

Derrek P. Hibar, +344 more
- 09 Apr 2015 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors conduct genome-wide association studies of the volumes of seven subcortical regions and the intracranial volume derived from magnetic resonance images of 30,717 individuals from 50 cohorts.
Journal ArticleDOI

The ENIGMA Consortium: large-scale collaborative analyses of neuroimaging and genetic data

Paul M. Thompson, +332 more
TL;DR: The ENIGMA Consortium has detected factors that affect the brain that no individual site could detect on its own, and that require larger numbers of subjects than any individual neuroimaging study has currently collected.
Journal ArticleDOI

Life-Span Changes of the Human Brain White Matter: Diffusion Tensor Imaging (DTI) and Volumetry

TL;DR: Although the volumetric data supported protracted growth into the sixth decade, DTI indices plateaued early in the fourth decade and then declined slowly into late adulthood followed by an accelerating decrease in senescence, providing insufficient evidence in support of a simple last-in-first-out hypothesis of life-span changes.