Steven P. Miller
University of Toronto
330 Papers
1.2K Citations
Steven P. Miller is an academic researcher from University of Toronto. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Internal medicine. The author has an hindex of 72, co-authored 284 publications. Previous affiliations of Steven P. Miller include York University & Montreal Children's Hospital.
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Papers
Abnormal Brain Development in Newborns with Congenital Heart Disease
Steven P. Miller,Patrick S. McQuillen,Shannon E. G. Hamrick,Duan Xu,David V. Glidden,Natalie N. Charlton,Tom R. Karl,Anthony Azakie,Donna M. Ferriero,A. James Barkovich,Daniel B. Vigneron +10 more
TL;DR: The imaging findings in term newborns with congenital heart disease are similar to those in premature newborns and may reflect abnormal brain development in utero.
822
BrainNetCNN: Convolutional neural networks for brain networks; towards predicting neurodevelopment.
Jeremy Kawahara,Colin J. Brown,Steven P. Miller,Brian G. Booth,Vann Chau,Ruth E. Grunau,Jill G. Zwicker,Ghassan Hamarneh +7 more
TL;DR: The BrainNetCNN framework is applied to predict cognitive and motor developmental outcome scores from structural brain networks of infants born preterm and outperforms a fully connected neural‐network with the same number of model parameters on both phantoms with focal and diffuse injury patterns.
706
Procedural pain and brain development in premature newborns
Susanne Brummelte,Ruth E. Grunau,Vann Chau,Kenneth J. Poskitt,Rollin Brant,Jillian Vinall,Ayala Gover,Anne Synnes,Steven P. Miller +8 more
TL;DR: The aim was to examine relationships between procedural pain in the NICU and early brain development in very preterm infants.
684
Understanding the Promises and Hurdles of Metagenomic Next-Generation Sequencing as a Diagnostic Tool for Infectious Diseases.
TL;DR: With the development of mNGS assays, it is essential for treating practitioners to understand both the power and limitations of the method as a diagnostic tool.
637
Patterns of brain injury in term neonatal encephalopathy
Steven P. Miller,Vijay Ramaswamy,David Michelson,A. James Barkovich,Barbara A. Holshouser,Nathaniel D. Wycliffe,David V. Glidden,Douglas D Deming,J. Colin Partridge,Yvonne W. Wu,Stephen Ashwal,Donna M. Ferriero +11 more
TL;DR: The basal ganglia/thalamus pattern was associated with the most impaired motor and cognitive outcome at 30 months in term neonatal encephalopathy, and measured prenatal risk factors did not predict the pattern of brain injury.
548