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Dive into the research topics where Kaundinya S. Gopinath is active.

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Featured researches published by Kaundinya S. Gopinath.


International Journal of Computer Vision | 2002

Using Prior Shapes in Geometric Active Contours in a Variational Framework

Yunmei Chen; Hemant D. Tagare; Sheshadri Thiruvenkadam; Feng Huang; David C. Wilson; Kaundinya S. Gopinath; Richard W. Briggs; Edward A. Geiser

In this paper, we report an active contour algorithm that is capable of using prior shapes. The energy functional of the contour is modified so that the energy depends on the image gradient as well as the prior shape. The model provides the segmentation and the transformation that maps the segmented contour to the prior shape. The active contour is able to find boundaries that are similar in shape to the prior, even when the entire boundary is not visible in the image (i.e., when the boundary has gaps). A level set formulation of the active contour is presented. The existence of the solution to the energy minimization is also established.We also report experimental results of the use of this contour on 2d synthetic images, ultrasound images and fMRI images. Classical active contours cannot be used in many of these images.


Pain | 2003

Central representation of visceral and cutaneous hypersensitivity in the irritable bowel syndrome

G. Nicholas Verne; Nathan Himes; Kaundinya S. Gopinath; Richard W. Briggs; Bruce Crosson; Donald D. Price

&NA; We have previously shown that irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) patients have both visceral and cutaneous hyperalgesia. The neural mechanisms of these forms of hyperalgesia were further characterized by comparing cortical processing of both rectal distension (35, 55 mmHg) and cutaneous heat nociceptive stimuli (foot immersion in 45 and 47°C water bath) in IBS patients and in a group of healthy age/sex‐matched controls. Our approach relied on functional magnetic resonance imaging neuroimaging analyses in which brain activation in age/sex‐matched control subjects was subtracted from that found in IBS patients. These analyses revealed that both rectal distension and cutaneous heat stimuli evoked greater neural activity in several brain regions of IBS patients in comparison to age/sex‐matched control subjects. These include those related to early stages of somatosensory processing (e.g. thalamus, somatosensory cortex) as well as those more related to cognitive and affective processing (insular, anterior cingulate, posterior cingulate, prefrontal cortex). Thus, our results support the hypothesis that hyperalgesia of IBS is manifested by increased somatosensory processing at all cortical levels. This was found to be the case not only for visceral hyperalgesia but also for cutaneous heat hyperalgesia, a likely form of secondary hyperalgesia. Furthermore, visceral and heat hyperalgesia were accompanied by increased neural activity within the same brain structures. These results support the hypothesis that visceral and cutaneous hyperalgesia in IBS patients is related to increased afferent processing in pathways ascending to the brain rather than to selectively increased activity at higher cortical levels (e.g. limbic and frontal cortical areas).


IEEE Transactions on Medical Imaging | 2007

Brain Functional Localization: A Survey of Image Registration Techniques

Ali Gholipour; Nasser Kehtarnavaz; Richard W. Briggs; Michael D. Devous; Kaundinya S. Gopinath

Functional localization is a concept which involves the application of a sequence of geometrical and statistical image processing operations in order to define the location of brain activity or to produce functional/parametric maps with respect to the brain structure or anatomy. Considering that functional brain images do not normally convey detailed structural information and, thus, do not present an anatomically specific localization of functional activity, various image registration techniques are introduced in the literature for the purpose of mapping functional activity into an anatomical image or a brain atlas. The problems addressed by these techniques differ depending on the application and the type of analysis, i.e., single-subject versus group analysis. Functional to anatomical brain image registration is the core part of functional localization in most applications and is accompanied by intersubject and subject-to-atlas registration for group analysis studies. Cortical surface registration and automatic brain labeling are some of the other tools towards establishing a fully automatic functional localization procedure. While several previous survey papers have reviewed and classified general-purpose medical image registration techniques, this paper provides an overview of brain functional localization along with a survey and classification of the image registration techniques related to this problem


Neuropsychology Review | 2007

Functional MRI of Language in Aphasia: A Review of the Literature and the Methodological Challenges

Bruce Crosson; Keith M. McGregor; Kaundinya S. Gopinath; Tim Conway; Michelle Benjamin; Yu-Ling Chang; Anna Bacon Moore; Anastasia M. Raymer; Richard W. Briggs; Megan Sherod; Christina E. Wierenga; Keith D. White

Animal analogue studies show that damaged adult brains reorganize to accommodate compromised functions. In the human arena, functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and other functional neuroimaging techniques have been used to study reorganization of language substrates in aphasia. The resulting controversy regarding whether the right or the left hemisphere supports language recovery and treatment progress must be reframed. A more appropriate question is when left-hemisphere mechanisms and when right-hemisphere mechanisms support recovery of language functions. Small lesions generally lead to good recoveries supported by left-hemisphere mechanisms. However, when too much language eloquent cortex is damaged, right-hemisphere structures may provide the better substrate for recovery of language. Some studies suggest that recovery is particularly supported by homologues of damaged left-hemisphere structures. Evidence also suggests that under some circumstances, activity in both the left and right hemispheres can interfere with recovery of function. Further research will be needed to address these issues. However, daunting methodological problems must be managed to maximize the yield of future fMRI research in aphasia, especially in the area of language production. In this review, we cover six challenges for imaging language functions in aphasia with fMRI, with an emphasis on language production: (1) selection of a baseline task, (2) structure of language production trials, (3) mitigation of motion-related artifacts, (4) the use of stimulus onset versus response onset in fMRI analyses, (5) use of trials with correct responses and errors in analyses, and (6) reliability and stability of fMRI images across sessions. However, this list of methodological challenges is not exhaustive. Once methodology is advanced, knowledge from conceptually driven fMRI studies can be used to develop theoretically driven, mechanism-based treatments that will result in more effective therapy and to identify the best patient candidates for specific treatments. While the promise of fMRI in the study of aphasia is great, there is much work to be done before this technique will be a useful clinical tool.


Journal of The International Neuropsychological Society | 2003

Left and right basal ganglia and frontal activity during language generation: Contributions to lexical, semantic, and phonological processes

Bruce Crosson; Hope Benefield; M. Allison Cato; Joseph Sadek; Anna Bacon Moore; Christina E. Wierenga; Kaundinya S. Gopinath; David Soltysik; Russell M. Bauer; Edward J. Auerbach; Didem Gökçay; Christiana M. Leonard; Richard W. Briggs

fMRI was used to determine the frontal, basal ganglia, and thalamic structures engaged by three facets of language generation: lexical status of generated items, the use of semantic vs. phonological information during language generation, and rate of generation. During fMRI, 21 neurologically normal subjects performed four tasks: generation of nonsense syllables given beginning and ending consonant blends, generation of words given a rhyming word, generation of words given a semantic category at a fast rate (matched to the rate of nonsense syllable generation), and generation of words given a semantic category at a slow rate (matched to the rate of generating of rhyming words). Components of a left pre-SMA-dorsal caudate nucleus-ventral anterior thalamic loop were active during word generation from rhyming or category cues but not during nonsense syllable generation. Findings indicate that this loop is involved in retrieving words from pre-existing lexical stores. Relatively diffuse activity in the right basal ganglia (caudate nucleus and putamen) also was found during word-generation tasks but not during nonsense syllable generation. Given the relative absence of right frontal activity during the word generation tasks, we suggest that the right basal ganglia activity serves to suppress right frontal activity, preventing right frontal structures from interfering with language production. Current findings establish roles for the left and the right basal ganglia in word generation. Hypotheses are discussed for future research to help refine our understanding of basal ganglia functions in language generation.


Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience | 2005

Role of the Right and Left Hemispheres in Recovery of Function during Treatment of Intention in Aphasia

Bruce Crosson; Anna Bacon Moore; Kaundinya S. Gopinath; Keith D. White; Christina E. Wierenga; Megan Gaiefsky; Katherine S. Fabrizio; Kyung K. Peck; David Soltysik; Christina Milsted; Richard W. Briggs; Tim Conway; Leslie J. Gonzalez Rothi

Two patients with residual nonfluent aphasia after ischemic stroke received an intention treatment that was designed to shift intention and language production mechanisms from the frontal lobe of the damaged left hemisphere to the right frontal lobe. Consistent with experimental hypotheses, the first patient showed improvement on the intention treatment but not on a similar attention treatment. In addition, in keeping with experimental hypotheses, the patient showed a shift of activity to right presupplementary motor area and the right lateral frontal lobe from pre-to post-intention treatment functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) of language production. In contrast, the second patient showed improvement on both the intention and attention treatments. During pre-treatment fMRI, she already showed lateralization of intention and language production mechanisms to the right hemisphere that continued into post-intention treatment imaging. From pre-to post-treatment fMRI of language production, both patients demonstrated increased activity in the posterior perisylvian cortex, although this activity was lateralized to left-hemisphere language areas in the second but not the first patient. The fact that the first patients lesion encompassed almost all of the dominant basal ganglia and thalamus whereas the second patients lesion spared these structures suggests that the dominant basal ganglia could play a role in spontaneous reorganization of language production functions to the right hemisphere. Implications regarding the theoretical framework for the intention treatment are discussed.


Neurobiology of Aging | 2008

Age-related changes in word retrieval: Role of bilateral frontal and subcortical networks

Christina E. Wierenga; Michelle Benjamin; Kaundinya S. Gopinath; William M. Perlstein; Christiana M. Leonard; Leslie J. Gonzalez Rothi; Tim Conway; M. Allison Cato; Richard W. Briggs; Bruce Crosson

Healthy older adults frequently report word-finding difficulties, yet the underlying cause of these problems is not well understood. This study examined whether age-related changes in word retrieval are related to changes in areas of the frontal lobes thought to subserve word retrieval or changes in areas of the inferior temporal lobes thought to be involved in semantic knowledge. Twenty younger and 20 older healthy adults named aloud photographs during event-related fMRI. Results showed that in the face of equivalent naming accuracy, older adults activated a larger frontal network than younger adults during word retrieval, but there were no activity differences between groups in the fusiform gyrus, suggesting that the substrates for word retrieval but not for semantic knowledge change with aging. Additionally, correlations between BOLD response and naming accuracy and response latency were found in several frontal and subcortical regions in older adults. Findings are discussed in the context of possible compensatory mechanisms invoked to maintain performance in healthy aging, and suggest that increased involvement of the right hemisphere is not universally beneficial to performance.


Stroke | 2004

Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Before and After Aphasia Therapy Shifts in Hemodynamic Time to Peak During an Overt Language Task

Kyung K. Peck; Anna Bacon Moore; Bruce Crosson; Megan Gaiefsky; Kaundinya S. Gopinath; Keith D. White; Richard W. Briggs

Background and Purpose— Comparing the temporal characteristics of hemodynamic responses in activated cortical regions of aphasic patients before and after therapy would provide insight into the relationship between improved task performance and changes in blood oxygenation level–dependent (BOLD) functional MRI (fMRI) signal. This study investigated differences in the time to peak (TTP) of hemodynamic responses in activated regions of interest (ROIs), before and after therapy, and related them to changes in task performance. Methods— Three aphasic patients and 3 controls overtly generated a single exemplar in response to a category. For the patients, TTP of hemodynamic responses in selected ROIs was compared before and after language therapy. The timing differences between auditory cues and verbal responses were compared with TTP differences between auditory and motor cortices. Results— The selected ROIs were significantly activated in both aphasic patients and controls during overt word generation. In the aphasic patients, both the timing difference from auditory cues to verbal responses and the TTP difference between auditory and motor cortices decreased after rehabilitation, becoming similar to the values found in controls. Conclusions— Findings indicate that (1) rehabilitation increased the speed of word-finding processes; (2) TTP analysis was sensitive to this functional change and can be used to represent improvement in behavior; and (3) it is important to monitor the behavioral performance that might correlate with the temporal pattern of the hemodynamic response.


Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience | 2004

Processing Words with Emotional Connotation: An fMRI Study of Time Course and Laterality in Rostral Frontal and Retrosplenial Cortices

M. Allison Cato; Bruce Crosson; Didem Gokcay; David Soltysik; Christina E. Wierenga; Kaundinya S. Gopinath; Nathan Himes; Heather Belanger; Russell M. Bauer; Ira Fischler; Leslie J. Gonzalez-Rothi; Richard W. Briggs

Responses of rostral frontal and retrosplenial cortices to the emotional significance of words were measured using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Twenty-six strongly righthanded participants engaged in a language task that alternated between silent word generation to categories with positive, negative, or neutral emotional connotation and a baseline task of silent repetition of emotionally neutral words. Activation uniquely associated with word generation to categories with positive or negative versus neutral emotional connotation occurred bilaterally in rostral frontal and retrosplenial cortices. Furthermore, the time courses of activity in these areas differed, indicating that they subserve different functions in processing the emotional connotation of words. Namely, the retrosplenial cortex appears to be involved in evaluating the emotional salience of information from external sources, whereas the rostral frontal cortex also plays a role in internal generation of words with emotional connotation. In both areas, activity associated with positive or negative emotional connotation was more extensive in the left hemisphere than the right, regardless of valence, presumably due to the language demands of word generation. The present findings localize specific areas in the brain that are involved in processing emotional meaning of words within the brains distributed semantic system. In addition, time course analysis reveals diverging mechanisms in anterior and posterior cortical areas during processing of words with emotional significance.


Brain and Language | 2009

Regional Changes in Word-Production Laterality After a Naming Treatment Designed to Produce a Rightward Shift in Frontal Activity

Bruce Crosson; Anna Bacon Moore; Keith M. McGregor; Yu-Ling Chang; Michelle Benjamin; Kaundinya S. Gopinath; Megan E. Sherod; Christina E. Wierenga; Kyung K. Peck; Richard W. Briggs; Leslie J. Gonzalez Rothi; Keith D. White

Five nonfluent aphasia patients participated in a picture-naming treatment that used an intention manipulation (opening a box and pressing a button on a device in the box with the left hand) to initiate naming trials and was designed to re-lateralize word production mechanisms from the left to the right frontal lobe. To test the underlying assumption regarding re-lateralization, patients participated in fMRI of category-member generation before and after treatment. Generally, the four patients who improved during treatment showed reduced frontal activity from pre- to post-treatment fMRI with increasing concentration of activity in the right posterior frontal lobe (motor/premotor cortex, pars opercularis), demonstrating a significant shift in lateraliity toward the right lateral frontal lobe, as predicted. Three of these four patients showed no left frontal activity by completion of treatment, indicating that right posterior lateral frontal activity supported category-member generation. Patients who improved in treatment showed no difference in lateralization of lateral frontal activity from normal controls pre-treatment, but post-treatment, their lateral frontal activity during category-member generation was significantly more right lateralized than that of controls. Patterns of activity pre- and post-treatment suggested increasing efficiency of cortical processing as a result of treatment in the four patients who improved. The one patient who did not improve during treatment showed a leftward shift in lateral frontal lateralization that was significantly different from the four patients who did improve. Neither medial frontal nor posterior perisylvian re-lateralization from immediately pre- to immediately post-treatment images was a necessary condition for significant treatment gains or shift in lateral frontal lateralization. Of the three patients who improved and in whom posterior perisylvian activity could be measured at post-treatment fMRI, all maintained equal or greater amounts of left-hemisphere perisylvian activity as compared to right. This finding is consistent with reviews suggesting both hemispheres are involved in recovery of language in aphasia patients.

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Richard W. Briggs

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Nasser Kehtarnavaz

University of Texas at Dallas

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Ali Gholipour

Boston Children's Hospital

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Kyung K. Peck

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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