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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.

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Omega-3 Fatty Acids for the Management of Hypertriglyceridemia: A Science Advisory From the American Heart Association

TL;DR: The use of n-3 FA (4 g/d) for improving atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease risk in patients with hypertriglyceridemia is supported by a 25% reduction in major adverse cardiovascular events in REDUCE-IT (Reduction of Cardiovascular Events With EPA Intervention Trial), a randomized placebo-controlled trial of EPA-only in high-risk patients treated with a statin.
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Changes in hippocampal volume and shape across time distinguish dementia of the Alzheimer type from healthy aging

TL;DR: Different patterns of hippocampal shape change in time as well as different rates of hippocampusal volume loss distinguish very mild DAT from healthy aging.
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Early DAT is distinguished from aging by high-dimensional mapping of the hippocampus

TL;DR: Assessments of hippocampal volume and shape derived from HDBM may be useful in distinguishing early DAT from healthy aging, and this work has suggested damage to the CA1 hippocampal subfield.
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Statistics on diffeomorphisms via tangent space representations.

TL;DR: An algorithm for solving the variational problem with respect to the initial momentum is derived and principal component analysis (PCA) is demonstrated in this setting with three-dimensional face and hippocampus databases.
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Basal ganglia volume and shape in children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder.

TL;DR: The shape compression pattern of basal ganglia in boys with ADHD suggests that ADHD-associated deviations from typical brain development involve multiple frontal-subcortical control loops, including circuits with premotor, oculomotor, and prefrontal cortices.