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Brain activation and connectivity of social cognition using diffuse optical imaging

Author(s): Banghe Zhu; Anuradha Godavarty

Published: 16 February 2009; 8 pages; 70 papers;
DOI: 10.1117/12.809942

Paper Abstract

In the current research, diffuse optical imaging (DOI) is used for the first time towards studies related to sociocommunication impairments, which is a characteristic feature of autism. DOI studies were performed on normal adult volunteers to determine the differences in the brain activation (cognitive regions) in terms of the changes in the cerebral blood oxygenation levels in response to joint and non-joint attention based stimulus (i.e. socio-communicative paradigms shown as video clips). Functional connectivity models are employed to assess the extent of synchronization between the left and right pre-frontal regions of the brain in response to the above stimuli.
This paper was published in SPIE Proceedings Vol. 7161
Photonic Therapeutics and Diagnostics V, Brian J. Wong M.D.; Henry Hirschberg M.D.; Kenton W. Gregory M.D.; Nikiforos Kollias; Reza S. Malek; Bernard Choi; Guillermo J. Tearney; Justus F. R. Ilgner; Steen J. Madsen; Haishan Zeng; Laura Marcu, Editors, 71613A
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