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Roger Fulton

Researcher at University of Sydney

Publications -  169
Citations -  3545

Roger Fulton is an academic researcher from University of Sydney. The author has contributed to research in topics: Imaging phantom & Iterative reconstruction. The author has an hindex of 29, co-authored 166 publications receiving 3298 citations. Previous affiliations of Roger Fulton include RMIT University & University of Sydney Faculty of Health Sciences.

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DPA-714, a New Translocator Protein–Specific Ligand: Synthesis, Radiofluorination, and Pharmacologic Characterization

TL;DR: The synthesis, radiofluorination, and pharmacologic evaluation of a new TSPO-specific pyrazolopyrimidine, DPA-714, shows promising in vivo properties and is warranting further investigation.
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The design and implementation of a motion correction scheme for neurological PET.

TL;DR: A method has been developed to accurately monitor the motion of the head during a neurological PET acquisition, and correct for this motion prior to image reconstruction and does not add significantly to either the acquisition or the subsequent data processing.
Journal Article

A scanning line source for simultaneous emission and transmission measurements in SPECT.

TL;DR: A scanning collimated line source for simultaneously acquiring emission and transmission data from a gamma camera has been developed and has been validated in phantom and human studies using a range of radionuclide combinations and imaging geometries.
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Correction for head movements in positron emission tomography using an optical motion tracking system

TL;DR: In this paper, a method for direct calibration of an optical motion-tracking system to the reconstruction coordinate frame using paired coordinate measurements obtained simultaneously from a PET scanner and tracking system is presented.
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Evaluation of two population-based input functions for quantitative neurological FDG PET studies

TL;DR: Both population-based IFs simplify the measurement of rCMRGlc with minimal loss in accuracy and require only two a–v blood samples for calibration and markedly reduce radiation exposure to the blood sampler.