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Neuroscience

D-Index
48
Citations
8642
World Ranking
6197
National Ranking
2711

Overview

Christopher D. Kroenke is affiliated with the Oregon National Primate Research Center in the United States. Their research work is primarily situated at the intersection of medicine and neuroscience, with a focus on several key subfields including radiology, nuclear medicine, and imaging; pediatrics, perinatology, and child health; cognitive neuroscience; neurology; and cellular and molecular neuroscience.

Their work addresses various topics related to advanced neuroimaging techniques and applications, functional brain connectivity studies, advanced MRI techniques and applications, fetal and pediatric neurological disorders, pregnancy and preeclampsia studies, neurological disorders and treatments, and birth, development, and health.

Christopher D. Kroenke has published multiple papers in diverse venues. Notable recent publications include:

  • "Alcohol Dependence Modifies Brain Networks Activated During Withdrawal and Reaccess: A c-Fos-Based Analysis in Mice" (2023) in Biological Psychiatry
  • "A neonatal nonhuman primate model of gestational Zika virus infection with evidence of microencephaly, seizures and cardiomyopathy" (2020) in PLoS ONE
  • "A model of tension-induced fiber growth predicts white matter organization during brain folding" (2021) in Nature Communications
  • "Motion corrected MRI differentiates male and female human brain growth trajectories from mid-gestation" (2020) in Nature Communications
  • "Quantitative longitudinal T2* mapping for assessing placental function and association with adverse pregnancy outcomes across gestation" (2022) in PLoS ONE

Frequently, their research appears in publication venues such as bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory), Scientific Reports, and proceedings of the International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine. Others include Nature Communications and PLoS ONE.

They have collaborated with several frequent co-authors during their research activity, including:

  • Kara Garcia
  • Xiaojie Wang
  • Victoria H. J. Roberts
  • Jamie O. Lo
  • Antonio E. Frias

Best Publications

  • Nuclear magnetic resonance methods for quantifying microsecond-to-millisecond motions in biological macromolecules.

    A G Palmer rd;C D Kroenke;J P Loria

  • Modeling dendrite density from magnetic resonance diffusion measurements.

    Sune Nørhøj Jespersen;Christopher D. Kroenke;Leif Østergaard;Joseph J. H. Ackerman

  • Axons pull on the brain, but tension does not drive cortical folding.

    Gang Xu;Andrew K. Knutsen;Krikor Dikranian;Christopher D. Kroenke

  • A population-average MRI-based atlas collection of the rhesus macaque

    Donald G. McLaren;Kristopher J. Kosmatka;Terrance R. Oakes;Christopher D. Kroenke;Christopher D. Kroenke

  • The INIA19 Template and NeuroMaps Atlas for Primate Brain Image Parcellation and Spatial Normalization.

    Torsten Rohlfing;Christopher D. Kroenke;Christopher D. Kroenke;Edith V. Sullivan;Mark F. Dubach

  • Connectotyping: Model Based Fingerprinting of the Functional Connectome

    Oscar Miranda-Dominguez;Brian D. Mills;Samuel D. Carpenter;Kathleen A. Grant

  • Altered white matter microstructure in children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder.

    Bonnie J. Nagel;Deepti Bathula;Megan Herting;Colleen Schmitt

  • Prenatal Cerebral Ischemia Disrupts MRI-Defined Cortical Microstructure Through Disturbances in Neuronal Arborization

    Justin M. Dean;Evelyn McClendon;Kelly Hansen;Aryan Azimi-Zonooz

  • Mechanical forces in cerebral cortical folding: a review of measurements and models.

    P.V. Bayly;L.A. Taber;C.D. Kroenke

  • On the nature of the NAA diffusion attenuated MR signal in the central nervous system.

    Christopher D. Kroenke;Joseph J.H. Ackerman;Dmitriy A. Yablonskiy

  • Determination of Axonal and Dendritic Orientation Distributions Within the Developing Cerebral Cortex by Diffusion Tensor Imaging

    Sune Nørhøj Jespersen;L. A. Leigland;A. Cornea;C. D. Kroenke

  • Isoflurane Anesthesia Has Long-term Consequences on Motor and Behavioral Development in Infant Rhesus Macaques.

    Kristine Coleman;Nicola D. Robertson;Gregory A. Dissen;Martha D. Neuringer

  • Histopathological correlates of magnetic resonance imaging–defined chronic perinatal white matter injury

    Art Riddle;Justin Dean;Joshua R. Buser;Xi Gong

  • Mechanics of cortical folding: stress, growth and stability.

    K. E. Garcia;C. D. Kroenke;P. V. Bayly

  • Measurement of the Dynamic Shear Modulus of Mouse Brain Tissue In Vivo by Magnetic Resonance Elastography

    Stefan M. Atay;Christopher D. Kroenke;Arash Sabet;Philip V. Bayly

  • Human Neural Stem Cells Induce Functional Myelination in Mice with Severe Dysmyelination

    Nobuko Uchida;Kevin Chen;Monika Dohse;Kelly D. Hansen

  • How Forces Fold the Cerebral Cortex.

    Christopher D. Kroenke;Philip V. Bayly

  • Bridging the Gap between the Human and Macaque Connectome: A Quantitative Comparison of Global Interspecies Structure-Function Relationships and Network Topology

    Oscar Miranda-Dominguez;Brian D Mills;David Grayson;Andrew Woodall

  • Microstructural Changes of the Baboon Cerebral Cortex during Gestational Development Reflected in Magnetic Resonance Imaging Diffusion Anisotropy

    Christopher D. Kroenke;David C. Van Essen;Terrie E. Inder;Sandra Rees

  • White Matter Lesions Defined by Diffusion Tensor Imaging in Older Adults

    Stephen A. Back;Christopher D. Kroenke;Larry S. Sherman;Gus Lawrence

  • Isoflurane Anesthesia Has Long-term Consequences on Motor and Behavioral Development in Infant Rhesus Macaques

    K. Coleman;N. D. Robertson;G. A. Dissen;M. D. Neuringer

Frequent Co-Authors

Jeffrey J. Neil
Jeffrey J. Neil Washington University in St. Louis
Damien A. Fair
Damien A. Fair University of Minnesota
Stephen A. Back
Stephen A. Back Oregon Health & Science University
Terrie E. Inder
Terrie E. Inder Brigham and Women's Hospital
Jaime F. Olavarria
Jaime F. Olavarria University of Washington
Henryk F. Urbanski
Henryk F. Urbanski Oregon National Primate Research Center
Jacob Raber
Jacob Raber Oregon Health & Science University
Daniel N. Streblow
Daniel N. Streblow Oregon Health & Science University
Sandra Rees
Sandra Rees University of Melbourne
Adolf Pfefferbaum
Adolf Pfefferbaum Stanford University

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