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Martha E. Shenton

Researcher at Brigham and Women's Hospital

Publications -  626
Citations -  48184

Martha E. Shenton is an academic researcher from Brigham and Women's Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Schizophrenia & Fractional anisotropy. The author has an hindex of 106, co-authored 586 publications receiving 44244 citations. Previous affiliations of Martha E. Shenton include Cambridge Health Alliance & Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center.

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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Agglomerative Region-Based Analysis

TL;DR: ARBA is an Agglomerative Clustering procedure, like Ward's method, which segments image sets in a common space to greedily maximize a likelihood function and is shown to increase sensitivity over VBA in a detection task on multivariate Diffusion MRI brain images.
Journal ArticleDOI

Investigation of Brain Iron in Niemann-Pick Type C: A 7T Quantitative Susceptibility Mapping Study.

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors examined brain iron using quantitative susceptibility mapping MR imaging in individuals with Niemann-Pick type C compared with healthy controls, and they found that higher susceptibility mapping in the pulvinar nucleus clusters correlated with lower volume of the thalamus on both sides.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dynamic intervention-based biomarkers may reduce heterogeneity and motivate targeted interventions in clinical high risk for psychosis

TL;DR: In this article , the longitudinal relationship between VM performance (NR vs. below NR) and clinical and functional outcomes over 24 months following admission to treatment, and compared the clinical and function status of NR patients with and without cognitive decrement at baseline and 12 months.
Posted ContentDOI

Multimodal Imaging-Based Classification of PTSD Using Data-Driven Computational Approaches: A Multisite Big Data Study from the ENIGMA-PGC PTSD Consortium

Xi Zhu, +127 more
- 13 Dec 2022 - 
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors analyzed brain MRI data from 3,527 structural-MRI, 2,502 resting state-fMRI, and 1,953 diffusion-MRI to classify individuals with PTSD versus controls using heterogeneous brain datasets from the ENIGMA-PGC PTSD Working group.