Anna Custo
University of Geneva
18 Papers
69 Citations
Anna Custo is an academic researcher from University of Geneva. The author has contributed to research in topics: Diffuse optical imaging & Electroencephalography. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 18 publications. Previous affiliations of Anna Custo include University of Genoa & Cemex.
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Papers
Electroencephalographic Resting-State Networks: Source Localization of Microstates.
Anna Custo,Dimitri Van De Ville,William M. Wells,Miralena I. Tomescu,Denis Brunet,Christoph M. Michel +5 more
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the EEG RSNs can be estimated reliably by measuring the reproducibility of the findings, and the seven state-specific R SNs partly resemble and extend previous functional magnetic resonance imaging-based networks estimated as the hemodynamic correlates of four canonical EEG microstates.
Effective scattering coefficient of the cerebral spinal fluid in adult head models for diffuse optical imaging.
TL;DR: This work explores the idea that the CSF scattering coefficient may be modeled by any value from zero up to the order of the typical inverse line-of-sight distance, without significantly altering the calculated detector signals or the partial path lengths relevant for functional measurements.
Deviant dynamics of EEG resting state pattern in 22q11.2 deletion syndrome adolescents: A vulnerability marker of schizophrenia?
Miralena I. Tomescu,Tonia A. Rihs,Robert Becker,Juliane Britz,Anna Custo,Frédéric Grouiller,Maude Schneider,Martin Debbané,Stephan Eliez,Christoph M. Michel +9 more
TL;DR: The aim of the present study was to investigate whether adolescents affected by the 22q11.2 deletion syndrome, known to have a 30 fold increased risk to develop schizophrenia, already show deviant EEG microstates, and found an increased presence of one microstate class that was associated with positive prodromal symptoms (hallucinations).
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Anatomical atlas-guided diffuse optical tomography of brain activation
Anna Custo,Anna Custo,David A. Boas,Daisuke Tsuzuki,Ippeita Dan,Rickson C. Mesquita,Rickson C. Mesquita,Bruce Fischl,Bruce Fischl,W. Eric L. Grimson,William M. Wells,William M. Wells +11 more
TL;DR: Results indicate that using the head atlas anatomy it is possible to reconstruct the location of thebrain activation to the expected gyrus of the brain, in agreement with the results obtained with the subject-specific head anatomy.
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•Journal Article
Anatomical atlas-guided diffuse optical tomography of brain activation
Anna Custo,Anna Custo,David A. Boas,Daisuke Tsuzuki,Ippeita Dan,Rickson C. Mesquita,Rickson C. Mesquita,Bruce Fischl,Bruce Fischl,W. Eric L. Grimson,William M. Wells,William M. Wells +11 more
TL;DR: In this article, a neuroimaging protocol that utilizes an anatomical atlas of the human head to guide diffuse optical tomography of human brain activation is described, which is demonstrated by imaging the hemodynamic response to median-nerve stimulation in three healthy subjects, and comparing the images obtained using a head atlas with the image obtained using the subject-specific head anatomy.
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