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Stefan A. Carp

Researcher at Harvard University

Publications -  131
Citations -  2867

Stefan A. Carp is an academic researcher from Harvard University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Diffuse optical imaging & Cerebral blood flow. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 105 publications receiving 2315 citations. Previous affiliations of Stefan A. Carp include University of California, Irvine & Stony Brook University.

Papers
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Noninvasive optical measures of CBV, StO2, CBF index, and rCMRO2 in human premature neonates' brains in the first six weeks of life

TL;DR: FD‐NIRS combined with DCS offers a safe and quantitative bedside method to assess CBV, StO2, CBF, and rCMRO2 in the premature brain, facilitating individual follow‐up and comparison among patients.
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Combined optical and X-ray tomosynthesis breast imaging.

TL;DR: The malignant tumors and benign lesions demonstrated different Hb(T) and scattering contrasts, which can potentially be exploited to reduce the false-positive rate of conventional mammography and unnecessary biopsies.
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Rational modification of protein stability by the mutation of charged surface residues.

TL;DR: The experiments described in this paper represent the first direct experimental test of the theoretical methods, taking advantage of solid-phase peptide synthesis to incorporate approximately isosteric amino acid substitutions, and suggest several residues that are destabilizing, relative to hydrophobic isosteres.
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Combined Optical Imaging and Mammography of the Healthy Breast: Optical Contrast Derived From Breast Structure and Compression

TL;DR: New progress is reported in developing the instrument and software platform of a combined X-ray mammography/diffuse optical breast imaging system and a series of balloon phantom experiments and the optical image analysis of 49 healthy patients, which shows composite features from both tissue structure and pressure distribution.
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The effect of different anesthetics on neurovascular coupling.

TL;DR: Results of the linear regression analysis show that the hemodynamic response is best correlated with the secondary and late cortico-cortical transmissions and not with the initial thalamic input activity in layer IV, which appears to be the same across all anesthetics used.