Neil D. Woodward

Orcid: 0000-0002-7472-5990

According to our database1, Neil D. Woodward authored at least 13 papers between 2009 and 2021.

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

Timeline

Legend:

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PhD thesis 
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Links

On csauthors.net:

Bibliography

2021
Characterizing effects of age, sex and psychosis symptoms on thalamocortical functional connectivity in youth.
NeuroImage, 2021

2020
BNST-insula structural connectivity in humans.
NeuroImage, 2020

2019
Hierarchical spherical deformation for cortical surface registration.
Medical Image Anal., 2019

Cortical Surface Parcellation Using Spherical Convolutional Neural Networks.
Proceedings of the Medical Image Computing and Computer Assisted Intervention - MICCAI 2019, 2019

2018
TRACE: A Topological Graph Representation for Automatic Sulcal Curve Extraction.
IEEE Trans. Medical Imaging, 2018

Constructing statistically unbiased cortical surface templates using feature-space covariance.
Proceedings of the Medical Imaging 2018: Image Processing, 2018

Sulcal depth-based cortical shape analysis in normal healthy control and schizophrenia groups.
Proceedings of the Medical Imaging 2018: Image Processing, 2018

2017
Gray Matter Surface Based Spatial Statistics (GS-BSS) in Diffusion Microstructure.
Proceedings of the Medical Image Computing and Computer Assisted Intervention - MICCAI 2017, 2017

2014
BNST neurocircuitry in humans.
NeuroImage, 2014

2010
The interrelationship of dopamine D2-like receptor availability in striatal and extrastriatal brain regions in healthy humans: A principal component analysis of [<sup>18</sup>F]fallypride binding.
NeuroImage, 2010

2009
Cerebral morphology and dopamine D<sub>2</sub>/D<sub>3</sub> receptor distribution in humans: A combined [<sup>18</sup>F]fallypride and voxel-based morphometry study.
NeuroImage, 2009

Corrigendum to "Cerebral morphology and dopamine D2/D3 receptor distribution in humans: A combined [18F]fallypride and voxel-based morphometry study" [NeuroImage 46 (2009) 31-38].
NeuroImage, 2009

Prior MDMA (Ecstasy) use is associated with increased basal ganglia-thalamocortical circuit activation during motor task performance in humans: An fMRI study.
NeuroImage, 2009


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