World's Best Scientists 2026 revealed!
Christian Windischberger

Christian Windischberger

D-Index & Metrics

Neuroscience

D-Index
61
Citations
15749
World Ranking
3639
National Ranking
25

Overview

Christian Windischberger is affiliated with the Medical University of Vienna in Austria. Their research primarily spans the fields of Neuroscience and Medicine, with a notable focus on Cognitive Neuroscience and Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and Imaging, complemented by studies in Neurology, Physiology, and Molecular Biology.

The scientist's contributions cover a range of topics, particularly emphasizing Functional Brain Connectivity Studies and Advanced MRI Techniques and Applications. They have also conducted work involving Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation Studies, Neural and Behavioral Psychology Studies, Neurological Disorders and Treatments, Pain Mechanisms and Treatments, and Visual Perception and Processing Mechanisms.

Windischberger has published recent papers that include the following:

  • "Concurrent TMS-fMRI: Technical Challenges, Developments, and Overview of Previous Studies," 2022, Frontiers in Psychiatry
  • "When differences matter: rTMS/fMRI reveals how differences in dispositional empathy translate to distinct neural underpinnings of self-other distinction in empathy," 2020, Cortex
  • "Acute TMS/fMRI response explains offline TMS network effects - An interleaved TMS-fMRI study," 2022, NeuroImage
  • "Reproducibility of amygdala activation in facial emotion processing at 7T," 2020, NeuroImage
  • "Beyond Sharing Unpleasant Affect-Evidence for Pain-Specific Opioidergic Modulation of Empathy for Pain," 2020, Cerebral Cortex

Frequent coauthors collaborating with Windischberger include Martin Tik, Michael Woletz, David Linhardt, Maria Vasileiadi, and Claus Lamm.

Regarding publication venues, the scientist has contributed multiple works to Brain Stimulation, Journal of Vision, NeuroImage, bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory), and Clinical Neurophysiology.

Best Publications

  • Toward discovery science of human brain function

    Bharat B. Biswal;Maarten Mennes;Xi Nian Zuo;Suril Gohel

  • Correlations and anticorrelations in resting-state functional connectivity MRI: a quantitative comparison of preprocessing strategies.

    Andreas Weissenbacher;Christian H. Kasess;Florian Gerstl;Rupert Lanzenberger

  • The Preparation and Execution of Self-Initiated and Externally-Triggered Movement: A Study of Event-Related fMRI

    Ross Cunnington;Ross Cunnington;Christian Windischberger;Luder Deecke;Ewald Moser

  • Slice-timing effects and their correction in functional MRI.

    Ronald Sladky;Karl J. Friston;Jasmin Tröstl;Ross Cunnington;Ross Cunnington

  • Reduced resting-state functional connectivity between amygdala and orbitofrontal cortex in social anxiety disorder.

    Andreas Hahn;Patrycja Stein;Christian Windischberger;Andreas Weissenbacher

  • The suppressive influence of SMA on M1 in motor imagery revealed by fMRI and dynamic causal modeling.

    Christian H. Kasess;Christian Windischberger;Ross Cunnington;Rupert Lanzenberger

  • The preparation and readiness for voluntary movement: a high-field event-related fMRI study of the Bereitschafts-BOLD response.

    Ross Cunnington;Christian Windischberger;Lüder Deecke;Ewald Moser;Ewald Moser

  • Amygdala activity to fear and anger in healthy young males is associated with testosterone

    Birgit Derntl;Christian Windischberger;Simon Robinson;Simon Robinson;Ilse Kryspin-Exner

  • Placebo analgesia and its opioidergic regulation suggest that empathy for pain is grounded in self pain

    Markus Rütgen;Eva-Maria Seidel;Giorgia Silani;Giorgia Silani;Igor Riečanský;Igor Riečanský

  • Facial emotion recognition and amygdala activation are associated with menstrual cycle phase.

    Birgit Derntl;Birgit Derntl;Birgit Derntl;Christian Windischberger;Simon Robinson;Simon Robinson;Elisabeth Lamplmayr

  • Towards understanding rTMS mechanism of action: Stimulation of the DLPFC causes network-specific increase in functional connectivity.

    Martin Tik;André Hoffmann;Ronald Sladky;Livia Tomova

  • Amygdala activation and facial expressions: explicit emotion discrimination versus implicit emotion processing.

    Ute Habel;Christian Windischberger;Birgit Derntl;Birgit Derntl;Birgit Derntl;Simon Robinson;Simon Robinson

  • Quantification in functional magnetic resonance imaging : Fuzzy clustering vs. correlation analysis

    R. Baumgartner;C. Windischberger;E. Moser

  • On the origin of respiratory artifacts in BOLD-EPI of the human brain.

    Christian Windischberger;Herbert Langenberger;Thomas Sycha;Edda M Tschernko

  • Premovement activity of the pre-supplementary motor area and the readiness for action: studies of time-resolved event-related functional MRI.

    Ross Cunnington;Christian Windischberger;Ewald Moser

  • Evidence for premotor cortex activity during dynamic visuospatial imagery from single-trial functional magnetic resonance imaging and event-related slow cortical potentials.

    Claus Lamm;Christian Windischberger;Ulrich Leodolter;Ewald Moser

  • Finger Somatotopy in Human Motor Cortex

    Roland Beisteiner;Christian Windischberger;Rupert Lanzenberger;Vinod Edward

  • P300 amplitude variation is related to ventral striatum BOLD response during gain and loss anticipation: an EEG and fMRI experiment.

    Daniela M Pfabigan;Eva Maria Seidel;Ronald Sladky;Andreas Hahn

  • Optimized 3 T EPI of the amygdalae.

    Simon Robinson;Christian Windischberger;Alexander Rauscher;Ewald Moser;Ewald Moser

  • Ultra-high-field fMRI insights on insight: Neural correlates of the Aha!-moment.

    Martin Tik;Ronald Sladky;Caroline Di Bernardi Luft;Caroline Di Bernardi Luft;David Willinger

  • The selection of intended actions and the observation of others' actions: A time-resolved fMRI study

    Ross Cunnington;Christian Windischberger;Simon Robinson;Ewald Moser

  • Disrupted Effective Connectivity Between the Amygdala and Orbitofrontal Cortex in Social Anxiety Disorder During Emotion Discrimination Revealed by Dynamic Causal Modeling for fMRI

    Ronald Sladky;Anna Höflich;Martin Küblböck;Christoph Kraus

Frequent Co-Authors

Siegfried Kasper
Siegfried Kasper Medical University of Vienna
Andreas Hahn
Andreas Hahn University of Giessen
Claus Lamm
Claus Lamm University of Vienna
Georg S. Kranz
Georg S. Kranz Hong Kong Polytechnic University
Ross Cunnington
Ross Cunnington University of Queensland
Birgit Derntl
Birgit Derntl University of Tübingen
Lüder Deecke
Lüder Deecke Medical University of Vienna
Ute Habel
Ute Habel RWTH Aachen University
Ilse Kryspin-Exner
Ilse Kryspin-Exner University of Vienna
Ruben C. Gur
Ruben C. Gur University of Pennsylvania

If you think any of the details on this page are incorrect, let us know.

Report an issue

We appreciate your kind effort to assist us to improve this page, it would be helpful providing us with as much detail as possible in the text box below:

Best Scientists Citing Christian Windischberger

Trending Scientists

Recently Published Articles