Peter A. Bandettini
National Institutes of Health
279 Papers
1.6K Citations
Peter A. Bandettini is an academic researcher from National Institutes of Health. The author has contributed to research in topics: Computer science & Functional magnetic resonance imaging. The author has an hindex of 84, co-authored 261 publications. Previous affiliations of Peter A. Bandettini include Medical College of Wisconsin & Harvard University.
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Papers
Layer-specific activation of sensory input and predictive feedback in the human primary somatosensory cortex
Yinghua Yu,Yinghua Yu,Yinghua Yu,Laurentius Huber,Jiajia Yang,Jiajia Yang,David C. Jangraw,Daniel A. Handwerker,Peter J. Molfese,Gang Chen,Yoshimichi Ejima,Jinglong Wu,Peter A. Bandettini +12 more
TL;DR: Using laminar fMRI, it is shown that prediction and sensory inputs activate specific layers in human primary somatosensory cortex, and that the sensory input from thalamic projects preferentially activates the middle layer, while the superficial and deep layers in S1 are more engaged for cortico-cortical predictive feedback input.
Integration of motion correction and physiological noise regression in fMRI.
TL;DR: The motion-modified RETroICOR showed marked improvement in simulations with varying amounts of subject motion, reducing the temporal standard deviation by up to 36% over the traditional RETROICOR, and performed better in nearly every voxel in the brain in both high- and low-resolution subject data.
84
Improved BOLD detection in the medial temporal region using parallel imaging and voxel volume reduction.
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that BOLD investigation of anterior MTL function can be enhanced by decreasing voxel size but only in combination with the SNR gained by using the 16-channel head coil system.
84
Face-Identity Change Activation Outside the Face System: “Release from Adaptation” May Not Always Indicate Neuronal Selectivity
Marieke Mur,Douglas A. Ruff,Douglas A. Ruff,Jerzy Bodurka,Jerzy Bodurka,Peter A. Bandettini,Nikolaus Kriegeskorte,Nikolaus Kriegeskorte +7 more
TL;DR: Results remind us that fMRI stimulus-change effects can have a range of causes and do not provide conclusive evidence for a neuronal representation of the changed stimulus property.
TE-dependent analysis of multi-echo fMRI with tedana
Elizabeth DuPre,Taylor Salo,Zaki Ahmed,Peter A. Bandettini,Katherine L. Bottenhorn,César Caballero-Gaudes,Logan T. Dowdle,Javier Gonzalez-Castillo,Stephan Heunis,Prantik Kundu,Angela R. Laird,Ross D. Markello,Christopher J. Markiewicz,Stefano Moia,Isla Staden,Joshua B. Teves,Eneko Uruñuela,Maryam Vaziri-Pashkam,Kirstie Whitaker,Daniel A. Handwerker +19 more