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Nebojša T. Milošević

Researcher at University of Belgrade

Publications -  91
Citations -  1010

Nebojša T. Milošević is an academic researcher from University of Belgrade. The author has contributed to research in topics: Fractal analysis & Biology. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 77 publications receiving 854 citations. Previous affiliations of Nebojša T. Milošević include Instituto Tecnológico de Santo Domingo.

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Application of modified Sholl analysis to neuronal dendritic arborization of the cat spinal cord.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that proposed modification of the Sholl method can successfully discriminate neuronal populations among different laminae of the cat spinal cord.
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Fractality of dendritic arborization of spinal cord neurons

TL;DR: Skeletonized images of Golgi impregnated neurons from the human, monkey, cat and rat dorsal horns were subjected to fractal analysis, supporting the hypothesis that neurons with dendrites of uncomplicated shapes can be considered fractal over three decades of scale.
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Morphology and classification of large neurons in the adult human dentate nucleus: A qualitative and quantitative analysis of 2D images

TL;DR: This study qualitatively analyze a sample of large neurons according to their morphology and topology, and classify these cells into four types, taking into account seven morphometric parameters which describe the main properties of the cell soma, dendritic field and dendrite arborization.
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Gray-Level Co-Occurrence Matrix Texture Analysis of Breast Tumor Images in Prognosis of Distant Metastasis Risk.

TL;DR: This preliminary study indicates the potential use of primary breast tumor histology texture as a highly accurate, simple, and cost-effective prognostic indicator of distant metastasis risk.
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Changes in fractal dimension and lacunarity as early markers of UV-induced apoptosis.

TL;DR: Fractal analysis was able to detect cellular apoptotic changes earlier than conventional flow cytometric analysis of phosphatidylserine exposure, DNA fragmentation and cell membrane permeabilization and these results indicate that fractal analysis might be a powerful and affordable method for non-invasive early identification of apoptosis in cell cultures.