Connectivity and dysconnectivity: A brief history of functional connectivity research in schizophrenia and future directions

Connectivity and dysconnectivity: A brief history of functional connectivity research in schizophrenia and future directions

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Connectomics: Applications to Neuroimaging is unique in presenting the frontier of neuro-applications using brain connectomics techniques. The book describes state-of-the-art research that applies brain connectivity analysis techniques to a broad range of neurological and psychiatric disorders (Alzheimer's, epilepsy, stroke, autism, Parkinson's, drug or alcohol addiction, depression, bipolar, and schizophrenia), brain fingerprint applications, speech-language assessments, and cognitive assessment. With this book the reader will learn: Basic mathematical principles underlying connectomicsHow connectomics is applied to a wide range of neuro-applicationsWhat is the future direction of connectomics techniques. This book is an ideal reference for researchers and graduate students in computer science, data science, computational neuroscience, computational physics, or mathematics who need to understand how computational models derived from brain connectivity data are being used in clinical applications, as well as neuroscientists and medical researchers wanting an overview of the technical methods. Features: Combines connectomics methods with relevant and interesting neuro-applications Covers most of the hot topics in neuroscience and clinical areas Appeals to researchers in a wide range of disciplines: computer science, engineering, data science, mathematics, computational physics, computational neuroscience, as well as neuroscience, and medical researchers interested in the technical methods of connectomics.

ISBN

9780128138397, 0128138394

Publication Date

2018

Publisher

Academic Press

City

London

Keywords

neuroimaging

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Book Chapter in Connectomics: applications to neuroimaging

Connectivity and dysconnectivity: A brief history of functional connectivity research in schizophrenia and future directions

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