Michele E. Perry
University of California, San Diego
8 Papers
3 Citations
Michele E. Perry is an academic researcher from University of California, San Diego. The author has contributed to research in topics: Twin study & Uncinate fasciculus. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 8 publications.
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Papers
Reproducibility of Quantitative Tractography Methods Applied to Cerebral White Matter
Setsu Wakana,Arvind Caprihan,Martina M. Panzenboeck,James H. Fallon,Michele E. Perry,Randy L. Gollub,Kegang Hua,Jiangyang Zhang,Hangyi Jiang,Hangyi Jiang,Prachi Dubey,Ari M. Blitz,Peter C.M. van Zijl,Peter C.M. van Zijl,Susumu Mori,Susumu Mori +15 more
TL;DR: This protocol provides guidelines for reproducible DTI-based tract-specific quantification for reconstructing major white matter tracts based on diffusion tensor imaging.
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Genetic and Environmental Contributions to Regional Cortical Surface Area in Humans: A Magnetic Resonance Imaging Twin Study
Lisa T. Eyler,Lisa T. Eyler,Elizabeth Prom-Wormley,Matthew S. Panizzon,Allison R. Kaup,Christine Fennema-Notestine,Michael C. Neale,Terry L. Jernigan,Bruce Fischl,Carol E. Franz,Michael J. Lyons,Michael D. Grant,Allison Stevens,Jennifer Pacheco,Michele E. Perry,J. Eric Schmitt,Larry J. Seidman,Heidi W. Thermenos,Ming T. Tsuang,Chi-Hua Chen,Wesley K. Thompson,Amy J. Jak,Amy J. Jak,Anders M. Dale,William S. Kremen +24 more
TL;DR: Findings are broadly consistent with results from animal studies regarding the evolution and development of cortical patterning and may guide future research into specific environmental and genetic determinants of variation among humans in the surface area of particular regions.
Genetic patterns of correlation among subcortical volumes in humans: results from a magnetic resonance imaging twin study.
Lisa T. Eyler,Lisa T. Eyler,Elizabeth Prom-Wormley,Christine Fennema-Notestine,Matthew S. Panizzon,Michael C. Neale,Terry L. Jernigan,Bruce Fischl,Carol E. Franz,Michael J. Lyons,Allison Stevens,Jennifer Pacheco,Michele E. Perry,J. Eric Schmitt,Nicholas C. Spitzer,Larry J. Seidman,Heidi W. Thermenos,Ming T. Tsuang,Anders M. Dale,William S. Kremen,William S. Kremen +20 more
TL;DR: The observed patterns of genetic correlation suggest the influence of multiple genetic influences, including influences on early development, functionally dependent patterns of growth or pruning, or regionally specific losses due to genes involved in aging, stress response, or disease.
Corrigendum to “Genetic and environmental influences on the size of specific brain regions in midlife: The VETSA MRI study”: [NeuroImage 49 (2010) 1213–1223]
William S. Kremen,Elizabeth Prom-Wormley,Matthew S. Panizzon,Lisa T. Eyler,Bruce Fischl,Michael C. Neale,Carol E. Franz,Michael J. Lyons,Jennifer Pacheco,Michele E. Perry,Allison Stevens,J. Eric Schmitt,Michael D. Grant,Larry J. Seidman,Heidi W. Thermenos,Ming T. Tsuang,Seth A. Eisen,Anders M. Dale,Christine Fennema-Notestine +18 more
TL;DR: Corrigendum to “Genetic and environmental influences on the size of specific brain regions in midlife: The VETSA MRI study” [NeuroImage 49 (2010) 1213–1223]
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