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Lucie Hertz-Pannier

Researcher at University of Paris

Publications -  132
Citations -  8441

Lucie Hertz-Pannier is an academic researcher from University of Paris. The author has contributed to research in topics: Diffusion MRI & Magnetic resonance imaging. The author has an hindex of 39, co-authored 123 publications receiving 7541 citations. Previous affiliations of Lucie Hertz-Pannier include Université Paris-Saclay & IBM.

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Functional Neuroimaging of Speech Perception in Infants

TL;DR: Functional magnetic resonance imaging measured brain activity evoked by normal and reversed speech in awake and sleeping 3-month-old infants found left-lateralized brain regions similar to those of adults, including the superior temporal and angular gyri, were already active in infants.
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The early development of brain white matter: A review of imaging studies in fetuses, newborns and infants

TL;DR: Current knowledge from post-mortem descriptions and in vivo MRI studies is summed up, focusing on T1- and T2-weighted imaging, diffusion tensor imaging, and quantitative mapping of T1/T2 relaxation times, myelin water fraction and magnetization transfer ratio.
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Functional anatomy of cognitive development: fMRI of verbal fluency in children and adults

TL;DR: In a test of verbal fluency, children tended to activate cortex more widely than adults, but activation patterns for fluency appear to be established by middle childhood, which may reflect developmental plasticity for the ongoing organization of neural networks, which underlie language capacity.
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Functional MR evaluation of temporal and frontal language dominance compared with the Wada test

TL;DR: There was a good congruence between hemispheric dominance for language as assessed with the Wada test and fMRI laterality indices in the frontal but not in the temporal lobes.
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Asynchrony of the early maturation of white matter bundles in healthy infants: Quantitative landmarks revealed noninvasively by diffusion tensor imaging

TL;DR: A specific maturation model, based on the respective roles of different maturational processes on the diffusion phenomena, was designed to highlight asynchronous maturation across bundles by evaluating the time‐course of mean diffusivity and anisotropy changes over the considered developmental period.