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Qiyuan Tian

Researcher at Harvard University

Publications -  78
Citations -  1611

Qiyuan Tian is an academic researcher from Harvard University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Diffusion MRI & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 60 publications receiving 885 citations. Previous affiliations of Qiyuan Tian include Stanford University & Fudan University.

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Localizing central swallowing functions by combining non-invasive brain stimulation with neuroimaging.

TL;DR: In this paper, surface electromyography (sEMG) recordings of lip orbicularis oris (OO) muscle activities elicited by a functional MRI-guided neuron-avigated TMS (nTMS) techniquewould aid in the detection of the submental complex (SMC) muscles' motor evoked potentials (MEPs) for localization of the SMC target in pharyngeal M1.
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A Twin Study of Altered White Matter Heritability in Youth With Autism Spectrum Disorder.

TL;DR: In this article , the authors examined the impact of genetic and environmental factors on white matter microstructure in twins with ASD compared to control twins without ASD, and developed a new version of the twin-pair difference score analysis method that estimates the contribution of genetic/environment factors to shared covariance between different brain and behavioral traits.
Posted Content

SRDTI: Deep learning-based super-resolution for diffusion tensor MRI

TL;DR: In this paper, a deep learning-based super-resolution method is proposed to synthesize high-resolution diffusion-weighted images (DWIs) from low-resolution DWIs, which are more similar to high resolution ground truth than those from trilinear and cubic spline interpolation.
Posted ContentDOI

The influence of axonal beading and undulation on axonal diameter mapping

TL;DR: In this article , the effect of non-cylindrical axonal shape on axonal diameter mapping with diffusion MRI has been investigated, where the authors quantify the influence of cellular-level features such as caliber variation and undulation on axon diameter estimation.