All Stories

  1. Heterogeneous neuroimaging findings across substance use disorders localize to a common brain network
  2. Multiple sclerosis lesions that impair memory map to a connected memory circuit
  3. Network Localization of Awareness in Visual and Motor Anosognosia
  4. Lesion Network Localization of a Stable Personality Trait
  5. Reply to “Is there an association between tuber involvement of the fusiform face area in autism diagnosis?”
  6. A Lesion-Derived Brain Network for Emotion Regulation
  7. Tubers affecting the fusiform face area are associated with autism diagnosis
  8. Brain lesions disrupting addiction map to a common human brain circuit
  9. Using causal methods to map symptoms to brain circuits in neurodevelopment disorders: moving from identifying correlates to developing treatments
  10. A lesion-derived brain network for emotion regulation
  11. Sex-specific lesion pattern of functional outcomes after stroke
  12. Regional Distribution of Brain Injury After Cardiac Arrest: Clinical and Electrographic Correlates
  13. Network Localization of Unconscious Visual Perception in Blindsight
  14. Reply: Looking beyond indirect lesion network mapping of prosopagnosia: direct measures required
  15. Matched neurofeedback during fMRI differentially activates reward‐related circuits in active and sham groups
  16. A Neural Circuit for Spirituality and Religiosity Derived From Patients With Brain Lesions
  17. Regional distribution of anoxic brain injury after cardiac arrest: clinical and electrographic correlates
  18. Lesion network mapping predicts post-stroke behavioural deficits and improves localization
  19. Face-Processing Performance is an Independent Predictor of Social Affect as Measured by the Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule Across Large-Scale Datasets
  20. Tuber Locations Associated with Infantile Spasms Map to a Common Brain Network
  21. Reducing the effects of motion artifacts in fMRI: A structured matrix completion approach
  22. Mapping mania symptoms based on focal brain damage
  23. Reply: The influence of sample size and arbitrary statistical thresholds in lesion-network mapping
  24. Cortical lesions causing loss of consciousness are anticorrelated with the dorsal brainstem
  25. Mapping migraine to a common brain network
  26. Looking beyond the face area: lesion network mapping of prosopagnosia
  27. Pediatric postoperative cerebellar cognitive affective syndrome follows outflow pathway lesions
  28. Response to “High fatigue frequency in narcolepsy type 1 and type 2 in a Brazilian Sleep Center”
  29. Response to “smoking, co-morbidities and narcolepsy”
  30. De Novo DNM1L Variant in a Teenager With Progressive Paroxysmal Dystonia and Lethal Super-refractory Myoclonic Status Epilepticus
  31. Comorbidities in a community sample of narcolepsy
  32. Intractable Epilepsy and Progressive Cognitive Decline in a Young Man
  33. BIDS apps: Improving ease of use, accessibility, and reproducibility of neuroimaging data analysis methods
  34. NeuroDebian Virtual Machine Deployment Facilitates Trainee-Driven Bedside Neuroimaging Research
  35. BIDS Apps: Improving ease of use, accessibility, and reproducibility of neuroimaging data analysis methods
  36. Case of a Two-Year-Old Boy With Recurrent Seizures, Abnormal Movements, and Central Hypoventilation
  37. Parcellating an Individual Subject's Cortical and Subcortical Brain Structures Using Snowball Sampling of Resting-State Correlations
  38. Functional Network Organization of the Human Brain
  39. Parcellation in Left Lateral Parietal Cortex Is Similar in Adults and Children
  40. Prediction of Individual Brain Maturity Using fMRI
  41. A Parcellation Scheme for Human Left Lateral Parietal Cortex
  42. Role of the anterior insula in task-level control and focal attention
  43. Identifying basal ganglia divisions in individuals using resting-state functional connectivity MRI
  44. Mapping the human brain at rest with diffuse optical tomography
  45. Resting-state functional connectivity in the human brain revealed with diffuse optical tomography
  46. Functional Brain Networks Develop from a “Local to Distributed” Organization
  47. Control networks in paediatric Tourette syndrome show immature and anomalous patterns of functional connectivity
  48. Defining functional areas in individual human brains using resting functional connectivity MRI
  49. The maturing architecture of the brain's default network
  50. A dual-networks architecture of top-down control
  51. Development of distinct control networks through segregation and integration
  52. Distinct brain networks for adaptive and stable task control in humans
  53. A method for using blocked and event-related fMRI data to study “resting state” functional connectivity
  54. Tyrosine-phosphorylated and nonphosphorylated isoforms of α-dystrobrevin