World's Best Scientists 2026 revealed!

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Psychology

D-Index
85
Citations
35520
World Ranking
1173
National Ranking
727

Medicine

D-Index
90
Citations
39318
World Ranking
12034
National Ranking
6170

Overview

Argye E. Hillis is affiliated with Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in the United States. Their research spans multiple domains within medicine and neuroscience, with a significant focus on stroke-related conditions and neuroimaging techniques.

Their primary fields of study include medicine and neuroscience, with substantial contributions to several subfields such as cognitive neuroscience, epidemiology, pulmonary and respiratory medicine, neurology, and radiology, nuclear medicine, and imaging.

The scientist's work covers a range of topics, notably:

  • Acute Ischemic Stroke Management
  • Neurobiology of Language and Bilingualism
  • Cerebrovascular and Carotid Artery Diseases
  • Stroke Rehabilitation and Recovery
  • Advanced Neuroimaging Techniques and Applications
  • Traumatic Brain Injury and Neurovascular Disturbances
  • Spatial Neglect and Hemispheric Dysfunction

Frequent co-authors collaborating with Argye E. Hillis include Vivek Yedavalli, Gregory W. Albers, Jeremy J. Heit, Victor Urrutia, and Adam A. Dmytriw. These partnerships reflect ongoing collaborative efforts in research related to stroke and brain imaging.

The scientist has published extensively in several scientific venues, with notable numbers of publications in:

  • Stroke
  • bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)
  • Aphasiology
  • Neurology
  • Journal of Neuroimaging

Among their recent papers are:

  • "Current Approaches to the Treatment of Post-Stroke Aphasia," published in 2021 in the Journal of Stroke
  • "Frontotemporal lobar degeneration," published in 2023 in Nature Reviews Disease Primers
  • "Deep learning-based detection and segmentation of diffusion abnormalities in acute ischemic stroke," published in 2021 in Communications Medicine
  • "Digital 3D Brain MRI Arterial Territories Atlas," published in 2023 in Scientific Data
  • "Cerebellar neuromodulation improves naming in post-stroke aphasia," published in 2020 in Brain Communications

Best Publications

  • Sensitivity of revised diagnostic criteria for the behavioural variant of frontotemporal dementia.

    Katya Rascovsky;John R. Hodges;David Knopman;Mario F. Mendez

  • Classification of primary progressive aphasia and its variants

    M L Gorno-Tempini;M L Gorno-Tempini;A E Hillis;S Weintraub;A Kertesz

  • Lexical organization of nouns and verbs in the brain

    Alfonso Caramazza;Argye E. Hillis

  • The multiple semantics hypothesis: Multiple confusions?

    Alfonso Caramazza;Argye E. Hillis;Brenda C. Rapp;Cristina Romani

  • CATEGORY-SPECIFIC NAMING AND COMPREHENSION IMPAIRMENT: A DOUBLE DISSOCIATION

    Argye E. Hillis;Alfonso Caramazza

  • Where do semantic errors come from

    Alfonso Caramazza;Argye E. Hillis

  • Re-examining the brain regions crucial for orchestrating speech articulation.

    Argye E. Hillis;Melissa Work;Peter B. Barker;Michael A. Jacobs

  • DTI tractography based parcellation of white matter: Application to the mid-sagittal morphology of corpus callosum

    Hao Huang;Jiangyang Zhang;Hangyi Jiang;Hangyi Jiang;Setsu Wakana;Setsu Wakana

  • Predictors and assessment of cognitive dysfunction resulting from ischaemic stroke

    Rebecca F Gottesman;Argye E Hillis

  • Aphasia Progress in the last quarter of a century

    Argye E. Hillis

  • Selective impairment of semantics in lexical processing

    Argye E. Hillis;Brenda Rapp;Cristina Romani;Alfonso Caramazza

  • Anatomy of spatial attention: insights from perfusion imaging and hemispatial neglect in acute stroke.

    Argye E. Hillis;Melissa Newhart;Jennifer Heidler;Peter B. Barker

  • Mechanisms for accessing lexical representations for output: Evidence from a category-specific semantic deficit

    Argye E. Hillis;Alfonso Caramazza

  • Subcortical aphasia and neglect in acute stroke: the role of cortical hypoperfusion

    A. E. Hillis;R. J. Wityk;P. B. Barker;N. J. Beauchamp

  • Anatomy of aphasia revisited.

    Julius Fridriksson;Dirk Bart Den Ouden;Argye E. Hillis;Argye E. Hillis;Gregory Hickok

  • Neural regions essential for distinct cognitive processes underlying picture naming

    Jessica DeLeon;Rebecca F. Gottesman;Jonathan T. Kleinman;Melissa Newhart

  • Natural course of choroidal neovascular membranes within the foveal avascular zone in senile macular degeneration.

    Susan B. Bressler;Neil M. Bressler;Stuart L. Fine;Argye Hillis

  • Levels of representation, co-ordinate frames, and unilateral neglect

    Alfonso Caramazza;Argye E. Hillis

  • Diagnostic criteria for the behavioral variant of frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD): Current limitations and future directions

    Katya Rascovsky;John R. Hodges;Christopher M. Kipps;Julene K. Johnson

  • Spatial representation of words in the brain implied by studies of a unilateral neglect patient.

    Alfonso Caramazza;Argye E. Hillis

Frequent Co-Authors

Rebecca F. Gottesman
Rebecca F. Gottesman Johns Hopkins University
Andreia V. Faria
Andreia V. Faria Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Alfonso Caramazza
Alfonso Caramazza Harvard University
Chris Rorden
Chris Rorden University of South Carolina
Julius Fridriksson
Julius Fridriksson University of South Carolina
Susumu Mori
Susumu Mori Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Peter B. Barker
Peter B. Barker Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Richard Leigh
Richard Leigh National Institutes of Health
Gregory Hickok
Gregory Hickok University of California, Irvine
Leonardo Bonilha
Leonardo Bonilha Medical University of South Carolina

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