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Michael I. Miller

Researcher at Johns Hopkins University

Publications -  640
Citations -  38471

Michael I. Miller is an academic researcher from Johns Hopkins University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Large deformation diffeomorphic metric mapping & Computational anatomy. The author has an hindex of 92, co-authored 599 publications receiving 34915 citations. Previous affiliations of Michael I. Miller include University of Tennessee & Discovery Institute.

Papers
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Multimodal MRI assessment for first episode psychosis: A major change in the thalamus and an efficient stratification of a subgroup.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors studied 87 first episode psychosis patients and 62 healthy subjects by combining supervised integrated factor analysis (SIFA) with a novel pipeline for automated structure-based analysis, an efficient and comprehensive method for dimensional data reduction that their group recently established.
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A Fully-Automated Subcortical and Ventricular Shape Generation Pipeline Preserving Smoothness and Anatomical Topology.

TL;DR: The proposed pipeline is shown to provide high accuracy, sufficient smoothness, and accurate anatomical topology and is demonstrated to be effective, both quantitatively and qualitatively, using a large collection of MRI scans.
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Shape analysis of hypertrophic and hypertensive heart disease using MRI-based 3D surface models of left ventricular geometry

TL;DR: A mathematical framework to construct a population-based high-resolution 3D LV triangulated surface (template) in which an iterative matching algorithm maps a surface mesh of a normal heart to a set of cross-sectional contours that were extracted from short-axis cine cardiac MR images of patients who were diagnosed with either HCM or HHD.
Patent

Fluid paths in etchable materials

TL;DR: In this article, the first surface of the cavity is etched with a second wet removal process to reduce the first roughness and produce a second roughness associated with the first, and then a coating is applied to the first or second surface to improve the wettability of the first and second surfaces.
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Brain Oxygen Extraction by Using MRI in Older Individuals: Relationship to Apolipoprotein E Genotype and Amyloid Burden.

TL;DR: MRI-based brain oxygen extraction shows that cognitively healthy carriers of the apolipoprotein E4 gene manifest diminishedbrain oxygen extraction capacity independent of amyloid burden, suggesting that the effect of APOE4 on OEF is not mediated by amyloids.