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Patrick R. Hof

Researcher at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

Publications -  834
Citations -  73115

Patrick R. Hof is an academic researcher from Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. The author has contributed to research in topics: Neocortex & Alzheimer's disease. The author has an hindex of 130, co-authored 796 publications receiving 64987 citations. Previous affiliations of Patrick R. Hof include Albert Einstein College of Medicine & National Institutes of Health.

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Presenilin transgenic mice as models of Alzheimer's disease.

TL;DR: Mice in which PS1 has been conditionally knocked out in adult forebrain on a PS2 null background develop a striking neurodegeneration that mimics AD neuropathology in being associated with neuronal and synaptic loss, astrogliosis and hyperphosphorylation of tau, although it is not accompanied by plaque deposits.
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Hemispheric asymmetry, modular variability and age-related changes in the human entorhinal cortex.

TL;DR: The present data confirm the occurrence of age-related neuron loss in the entorhinal cortex and speculate that functional lateralization of the human entorHinal cortex may be associated with specialization for memory processing related to language.
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Parvalbumin in the monkey striate cortex: a quantitative immunoelectron-microscopy study.

TL;DR: It is observed that the vast majority of parvalbumin-immunoreactive synaptic contacts in the primary visual cortex of Macaca fascicularis are of the symmetric type, and these neurons are known to be inhibitory and to form symmetric synapses.

25th Annual Computational Neuroscience Meeting: CNS-2016

Tatyana O. Sharpee, +582 more
TL;DR: Table of contents Functional advantages of cell-type heterogeneity in neural circuits, Dynamics and biomarkers of mental disorders, and Objective criteria for computational neuroscience model selection are presented.
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The relationship between the claustrum and endopiriform nucleus: a perspective towards consensus on cross-species homology

TL;DR: In rodents, it is concluded that the CLA and the dorsal endopiriform nucleus (DEn) are subregions of a larger complex, which likely performs analogous computations and exert similar effects on their respective cortical targets (e.g., sensorimotor versus limbic).