A list of puns related to "Neuroimaging"
I'm new to this field of neuroimaging. I'm currently working on schizophrenia disorders. As a newbie I find it extremely annoying to use multiple tools involving multiple platforms to process the data. And during the time of preprocessing I found out that nipype is involving too much IO reads and writes even when it uses the same interface for sequential processing. As I'm from a data science and computer engineering background, I feel that the process could be optimised drastically if we can do the functions in-memory instead of disk writes and reads.
Now my question is, will the library be of any use to the community? Will it enable new comers like me to fasten the learning curve? Please let me know your honest opinion
If you got your visuals after using a medical or recreational drug with hallucinogetic properties, like antidepressants, cannabis and psychedelics you should really participate in the online survey that Macquarie university in Australia is conducting. If you live there you can also fill out the form to participate in their coming neuroimaging study. You can read more about it below.
https://www.reddit.com/r/HPPD/comments/qreo96/hallucinogen_persisting_perception_disorder_hppd/
I'm working on classifying schizophrenia using Machine Learning and deep neural networks with open datasets from schizconnect.org and openneuro.org. I'm thinking of going with only python approach. Any suggestions and tools that I must know?
P.S I'm from Data Science background and have very little knowledge of neuroscience. (Johns Hopkins on Coursera)
Im a graduate student and am currently searching for a research internship in which Iβd like to learn more about one neuroimaging technique. What would you suggest, which imaging technique would be most beneficial for a research career in clinical neuropsychology?
does anyone have a good, deep-dive text/course for math underlying neuroimaging? I've taken Eero Simonceli's "math tools or neuroscience" and want to keep developing. Thanks!
Hello!
We are developing new paradigms to assess the role of social cognition in anorexia nervosa by examining both behavioural and brain responses to various situations. We are looking for women aged 18 β 25 years with or without a current diagnosis of anorexia nervosa to help us evaluate the new paradigms. The study involves a screening phone call and an in-person experimental visit to Kingβs College London Denmark Hill campus. The experimental visit will take approximately 2.5 hours and afterwards you will receive Β£40 reimbursement.
For more information, please visit https://www.callforparticipants.com/study/1Z6W0/social-cognition-in-anorexia-nervosa or contact me via email jenni.leppanen@kcl.ac.uk.
Thank you very much!
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