Jonathan D. Power

Orcid: 0000-0002-6922-100X

According to our database1, Jonathan D. Power authored at least 16 papers between 2009 and 2021.

Collaborative distances:
  • Dijkstra number2 of five.
  • Erdős number3 of four.

Timeline

Legend:

Book 
In proceedings 
Article 
PhD thesis 
Dataset
Other 

Links

Online presence:

On csauthors.net:

Bibliography

2021
On measuring head motion and effects of head molds during fMRI.
NeuroImage, 2021

2020
Characteristics of respiratory measures in young adults scanned at rest, including systematic changes and "missed" deep breaths.
NeuroImage, 2020

2019
Customized head molds reduce motion during resting state fMRI scans.
NeuroImage, 2019

Distinctions among real and apparent respiratory motions in human fMRI data.
NeuroImage, 2019

Temporal ICA has not properly separated global fMRI signals: A comment on Glasser et al. (2018).
NeuroImage, 2019

2017
Sources and implications of whole-brain fMRI signals in humans.
NeuroImage, 2017

A simple but useful way to assess fMRI scan qualities.
NeuroImage, 2017

Benchmarking of participant-level confound regression strategies for the control of motion artifact in studies of functional connectivity.
NeuroImage, 2017

2016
Evaluation of Denoising Strategies to Address Motion-Correlated Artifacts in Resting-State Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Data from the Human Connectome Project.
Brain Connect., 2016

2015
Recent progress and outstanding issues in motion correction in resting state fMRI.
NeuroImage, 2015

2014
Methods to detect, characterize, and remove motion artifact in resting state fMRI.
NeuroImage, 2014

2013
Resting-state fMRI in the Human Connectome Project.
NeuroImage, 2013

Steps toward optimizing motion artifact removal in functional connectivity MRI; a reply to Carp.
NeuroImage, 2013

2012
Corrigendum to "Spurious but systematic correlations in functional connectivity MRI networks arise from subject motion" [NeuroImage 59 (3) (2012) 2142-2154].
NeuroImage, 2012

Spurious but systematic correlations in functional connectivity MRI networks arise from subject motion.
NeuroImage, 2012

2009
Functional Brain Networks Develop from a "Local to Distributed" Organization.
PLoS Comput. Biol., 2009


  Loading...