Attanagoda K. S. Santha
National Institutes of Health
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Featured researches published by Attanagoda K. S. Santha.
Neuroreport | 1997
Venkata S. Mattay; Joseph H. Callicott; Alessandro Bertolino; Attanagoda K. S. Santha; K. Tallent; Terry E. Goldberg; Joseph A. Frank; Daniel R. Weinberger
PREVIOUS neuroimaging studies have suggested that patients with schizophrenia fail to recruit appropriate focal patterns of cortical responses to cognitive tasks. We investigated whether patients with schizophrenia show a normal focal response to a simple motor task. Seven strongly right-handed patients with schizophrenia and seven strongly right-handed normal subjects performed motor tasks of increasing complexity. Patients were unable to recruit as focal a response even to a simple, automatic sequential finger movement task. They showed greater ipsilateral activation in the primary sensorimotor and lateral premotor regions and had a significantly lower laterality quotient than normal subjects. These phenomena increased with the complexity of the task. These results demonstrate a functional disturbance in the cortical motor circuitry of patients with schizophrenia.
Journal of Computer Assisted Tomography | 1997
John Ostuni; Attanagoda K. S. Santha; Venkata S. Mattay; Daniel R. Weinberger; Ronald L. Levin; Joseph A. Frank
PURPOSE Typically, the final step in volume registration is the reslicing of the volume of interest. The purpose of this work is to examine the effects of this reslicing on functional MRI (fMRI) data using different interpolation methods. METHOD Functional whole-brain echo planar imaging (EPI) volumes were resliced using six different interpolation methods: trilinear, tricubic splines, and a 3D sinc function using a rectangular and a Hanning window, both with half-window lengths of 3 and 4 voxels. RESULTS Interpolation by tricubic spline and 3D sinc using a Hanning window had comparable errors, although tricubic spline interpolation was computationally the fastest. Interpolation by trilinear and 3D sinc using a rectangular window had relatively large errors, although the speed of trilinear makes it desirable for some applications. CONCLUSION Interpolations using all of the tested methods adversely affected the fMRI data, although these effects differed for each method.
Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 1998
Venkata S. Mattay; Joseph H. Callicott; Alessandro Bertolino; Attanagoda K. S. Santha; John D. Van Horn; K. Tallent; Joseph A. Frank; Daniel R. Weinberger
NeuroImage | 1996
Daniel R. Weinberger; Venkata S. Mattay; Joseph H. Callicott; Kathryn J. Kotrla; Attanagoda K. S. Santha; Peter van Gelderen; Jeff H. Duyn; Chrit Moonen; Joseph A. Frank
Radiology | 1996
Venkata S. Mattay; Joseph A. Frank; Attanagoda K. S. Santha; James J. Pekar; Jeff H. Duyn; Alan C. McLaughlin; Daniel R. Weinberger
Magnetic Resonance in Medicine | 1996
Yihong Yang; Gary H. Glover; Peter van Gelderen; Venkata S. Mattay; Attanagoda K. S. Santha; Roy H. Sexton; Nick F. Ramsey; Chrit T. W. Moonen; Daniel R. Weinberger; Joseph A. Frank; Jeff H. Duyn
Magnetic Resonance in Medicine | 1997
Alan C. McLaughlin; Frank Q. Ye; James J. Pekar; Attanagoda K. S. Santha; Joseph A. Frank
NeuroImage | 1996
Venkata S. Mattay; Attanagoda K. S. Santha; J.D. Van Horn; R. Sexton; J.A. Frank; D.R. Weinberger
Academic Radiology | 1996
Venkata S. Mattay; Joseph A. Frank; Jeff H. Duyn; Kathryn J. Kotrla; Attanagoda K. S. Santha; G. Esposito; Roy H. Sexton; Peter Barker; Trey Sunderland; Chrit T. W. Moonen; Daniel R. Weinberger
NeuroImage | 1997
Venkata S. Mattay; Joseph H. Callicott; Alessandro Bertolino; Attanagoda K. S. Santha; K. Tallent; Joseph A. Frank; Daniel R. Weinberger