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Neuroscience

D-Index
89
Citations
28576
World Ranking
1147
National Ranking
591

Overview

Ann E. Kelley was affiliated with the University of Wisconsin-Madison in the United States. Throughout their career, they contributed research primarily in the field of medicine, focusing on multiple subfields including reproductive medicine, artificial intelligence applications in healthcare, psychiatry and mental health, public health, and radiology.

Their recent published works cover a range of topics and were featured in various scientific journals. These publications include:

  • Incidence, prevalence, and trends in polycystic ovary syndrome diagnosis: a United States population-based study from 2006 to 2019 (2023), published in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology
  • Data-driven automated classification algorithms for acute health conditions: applying PheNorm to COVID-19 disease (2023), published in the Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association
  • Risk Factors for Incident Polycystic Ovary Syndrome Diagnosis (2024), published in the Journal of Women's Health
  • The Adult Changes in Thought (ACT) Medical Records Abstraction Project: A resource for research on the aging brain and Alzheimer's disease and related dementias (2023), published in Alzheimer's & Dementia
  • Protocol for Designing a Model to Predict the Likelihood of Psychosis From Electronic Health Records Using Natural Language Processing and Machine Learning (2024), published in The Permanente Journal

Their frequent collaborators included:

  • David Cronkite
  • Jennifer Covey
  • Onchee Yu
  • Jacob Christ
  • Renate Schulze-Rath

The scientist's body of work appeared repeatedly in notable venues such as the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association, Journal of Women's Health, Alzheimer's & Dementia, and The Permanente Journal.

Ann E. Kelley's research topics spanned several thematic areas including ovarian function and disorders, reproductive biology and fertility, ovarian cancer diagnosis and treatment, the use of machine learning in healthcare, COVID-19 diagnosis using artificial intelligence, explainable artificial intelligence (XAI), and dementia and cognitive impairment research.

Best Publications

  • The Neuroscience of Natural Rewards: Relevance to Addictive Drugs

    Ann E. Kelley;Kent C. Berridge

  • Ventral striatal control of appetitive motivation: role in ingestive behavior and reward-related learning.

    Ann E Kelley

  • The amygdalostriatal projection in the rat—an anatomical study by anterograde and retrograde tracing methods

    A.E. Kelley;V.B. Domesick;W.J.H. Nauta

  • Memory and addiction: shared neural circuitry and molecular mechanisms.

    Ann E. Kelley

  • Corticostriatal-hypothalamic circuitry and food motivation: integration of energy, action and reward.

    Ann E. Kelley;Brian A. Baldo;Wayne E. Pratt;Matthew J. Will

  • The distribution of the projection from the hippocampal formation to the nucleus accumbens in the rat: An anterograde and retrograde-horseradish peroxidase study

    Unknown

  • Methylphenidate Preferentially Increases Catecholamine Neurotransmission within the Prefrontal Cortex at Low Doses that Enhance Cognitive Function

    Craig W. Berridge;David M. Devilbiss;Matthew E. Andrzejewski;Amy F.T. Arnsten

  • Opioid modulation of taste hedonics within the ventral striatum.

    A.E. Kelley;V.P. Bakshi;S.N. Haber;T.L. Steininger

  • GABA in the Nucleus Accumbens Shell Participates in the Central Regulation of Feeding Behavior

    Thomas R. Stratford;Ann E. Kelley

  • Coincident Activation of NMDA and Dopamine D1Receptors within the Nucleus Accumbens Core Is Required for Appetitive Instrumental Learning

    Stephanie L. Smith-Roe;Ann E. Kelley

  • Intake of high-fat food is selectively enhanced by mu opioid receptor stimulation within the nucleus accumbens.

    Min Zhang;Blake A. Gosnell;Ann E. Kelley

  • Evidence of a Functional Relationship between the Nucleus Accumbens Shell and Lateral Hypothalamus Subserving the Control of Feeding Behavior

    Thomas R. Stratford;Ann E. Kelley

  • Discrete neurochemical coding of distinguishable motivational processes: insights from nucleus accumbens control of feeding

    Brian A. Baldo;Ann E. Kelley

  • A proposed hypothalamic-thalamic-striatal axis for the integration of energy balance, arousal, and food reward.

    Ann E. Kelley;Brian A. Baldo;Wayne E. Pratt

  • Overlapping distributions of orexin/hypocretin‐ and dopamine‐β‐hydroxylase immunoreactive fibers in rat brain regions mediating arousal, motivation, and stress

    Brian A. Baldo;Roger A. Daniel;Craig W. Berridge;Ann E. Kelley

  • Risk taking and novelty seeking in adolescence: introduction to part I.

    Ann E. Kelley;Terri Schochet;Charles F. Landry

  • Response-Reinforcement Learning is Dependent on N-Methyl-D-Aspartate Receptor Activation in the Nucleus Accumbens Core

    Ann E. Kelley;Stephanie L. Smith-Roe;Matthew R. Holahan

  • Nucleus accumbens opioid, GABaergic, and dopaminergic modulation of palatable food motivation: contrasting effects revealed by a progressive ratio study in the rat.

    Min Zhang;Christian Balmadrid;Ann E. Kelley

  • Wake-promoting and sleep-suppressing actions of hypocretin (orexin): basal forebrain sites of action

    R.A España;B.A Baldo;A.E Kelley;C.W Berridge

  • Enhanced intake of high-fat food following striatal mu-opioid stimulation: microinjection mapping and Fos expression.

    M Zhang;A.E Kelley

  • PKMζ Maintains Spatial, Instrumental, and Classically Conditioned Long-Term Memories

    Peter Serrano;Eugenia L Friedman;Jana Kenney;Stephen M Taubenfeld

Frequent Co-Authors

Craig W. Berridge
Craig W. Berridge University of Wisconsin–Madison
Jerry W. Rudy
Jerry W. Rudy University of Colorado Boulder
Stephen Maren
Stephen Maren University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Ruth M. Benca
Ruth M. Benca University of California, Irvine
Todd Charlton Sacktor
Todd Charlton Sacktor SUNY Downstate Medical Center
Cristina M. Alberini
Cristina M. Alberini New York University
Richard J. Davidson
Richard J. Davidson University of Wisconsin–Madison
Suzanne N. Haber
Suzanne N. Haber University of Rochester Medical Center
Rodrigo A. España
Rodrigo A. España Drexel University
Kent C. Berridge
Kent C. Berridge University of Michigan–Ann Arbor

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Best Scientists Citing Ann E. Kelley