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Neuroscience

D-Index
78
Citations
76242
World Ranking
1718
National Ranking
834

Overview

Gordon L. Shulman is affiliated with Washington University in St. Louis in the United States. Their research primarily spans the fields of neuroscience and medicine, with a particular focus on cognitive neuroscience and radiology, nuclear medicine, and imaging.

Their work extensively covers topics involving functional brain connectivity studies, neural dynamics and brain function, and advanced neuroimaging techniques and applications. Additional research areas include EEG and brain-computer interfaces, advanced MRI techniques and applications, neural and behavioral psychology studies, as well as visual perception and processing mechanisms.

Frequent publication venues for Shulman's work include:

  • bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)
  • NeuroImage Clinical
  • NeuroImage
  • Nature Communications
  • Brain Structure and Function

Notable recent scientific papers authored or co-authored by Gordon L. Shulman include:

  • Lesion Quantification Toolkit: A MATLAB software tool for estimating grey matter damage and white matter disconnections in patients with focal brain lesions, 2021, NeuroImage Clinical
  • Damage to the shortest structural paths between brain regions is associated with disruptions of resting-state functional connectivity after stroke, 2020, NeuroImage
  • Subcortical-cortical dynamical states of the human brain and their breakdown in stroke, 2022, Nature Communications
  • Mapping correlated neurological deficits after stroke to distributed brain networks, 2022, Brain Structure and Function
  • Spontaneously emerging patterns in human visual cortex and their functional connectivity are linked to the patterns evoked by visual stimuli, 2020, Journal of Neurophysiology

Gordon L. Shulman collaborates frequently with several researchers, including:

  • Maurizio Corbetta
  • Joseph C. Griffis
  • Nicholas V. Metcalf
  • Lorenzo Pini
  • Lu Zhang

Best Publications

  • Control of goal-directed and stimulus-driven attention in the brain

    Maurizio Corbetta;Gordon L. Shulman

  • A default mode of brain function.

    Marcus E. Raichle;Ann Mary MacLeod;Abraham Z. Snyder;William J. Powers

  • The Reorienting System of the Human Brain: From Environment to Theory of Mind

    Maurizio Corbetta;Gaurav Patel;Gordon L. Shulman

  • Medial prefrontal cortex and self-referential mental activity: Relation to a default mode of brain function

    Debra A. Gusnard;Erbil Akbudak;Gordon L. Shulman;Marcus E. Raichle

  • Voluntary orienting is dissociated from target detection in human posterior parietal cortex

    Maurizio Corbetta;J. Michelle Kincade;John M. Ollinger;Marc P. McAvoy

  • Common blood flow changes across visual tasks: I. increases in subcortical structures and cerebellum but not in nonvisual cortex

    Gordon L. Shulman;Maurizio Corbetta;Randy L. Buckner;Julie A. Fiez

  • Selective and divided attention during visual discriminations of shape, color, and speed: functional anatomy by positron emission tomography

    M Corbetta;FM Miezin;S Dobmeyer;GL Shulman

  • A Common Network of Functional Areas for Attention and Eye Movements

    Maurizio Corbetta;Erbil Akbudak;Thomas E Conturo;Abraham Z Snyder

  • A PET study of visuospatial attention

    Maurizio Corbetta;Francis M. Miezin;Gordon L. Shulman;Steven E. Petersen

  • Common blood flow changes across visual tasks: Ii. decreases in cerebral cortex

    Gordon L. Shulman;Julie A. Fiez;Maurizio Corbetta;Randy L. Buckner

  • Spatial neglect and attention networks

    Maurizio Corbetta;Gordon L. Shulman

  • Attentional modulation of neural processing of shape, color, and velocity in humans

    Maurizio Corbetta;Francis M. Miezin;Susan Dobmeyer;Gordon L. Shulman

  • Breakdown of Functional Connectivity in Frontoparietal Networks Underlies Behavioral Deficits in Spatial Neglect

    Biyu J. He;Abraham Z. Snyder;Justin L. Vincent;Adrian Epstein

  • Superior Parietal Cortex Activation During Spatial Attention Shifts and Visual Feature Conjunction

    Maurizio Corbetta;Gordon L. Shulman;Francis M. Miezin;Steven E. Petersen

  • Neural Systems for Visual Orienting and Their Relationships to Spatial Working Memory

    Maurizio Corbetta;J. Michelle Kincade;Gordon L. Shulman

  • Resting interhemispheric functional magnetic resonance imaging connectivity predicts performance after stroke.

    Alex R. Carter;Serguei V. Astafiev;Catherine E. Lang;Lisa T. Connor

  • Functional organization of human intraparietal and frontal cortex for attending, looking, and pointing.

    Serguei V. Astafiev;Gordon L. Shulman;Christine M. Stanley;Abraham Z. Snyder

  • Extrastriate body area in human occipital cortex responds to the performance of motor actions.

    Serguei V Astafiev;Christine M Stanley;Gordon L Shulman;Maurizio Corbetta

  • An Event-Related Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Study of Voluntary and Stimulus-Driven Orienting of Attention

    J. Michelle Kincade;Richard A. Abrams;Serguei V. Astafiev;Gordon L. Shulman

  • Top-Down Control of Human Visual Cortex by Frontal and Parietal Cortex in Anticipatory Visual Spatial Attention

    Steven L. Bressler;Wei Tang;Chad M. Sylvester;Gordon L. Shulman

  • Separating Processes within a Trial in Event-Related Functional MRI: II. Analysis

    J.M. Ollinger;M. Corbetta;G.L. Shulman

Frequent Co-Authors

Maurizio Corbetta
Maurizio Corbetta University of Padua
Abraham Z. Snyder
Abraham Z. Snyder Washington University in St. Louis
Steven E. Petersen
Steven E. Petersen Washington University in St. Louis
Marcus E. Raichle
Marcus E. Raichle Washington University in St. Louis
Francis M. Miezin
Francis M. Miezin Washington University in St. Louis
Randy L. Buckner
Randy L. Buckner Harvard University
Joshua S. Shimony
Joshua S. Shimony Washington University in St. Louis
Steven L. Bressler
Steven L. Bressler Florida Atlantic University
Michael I. Posner
Michael I. Posner University of Oregon
Michael J. Strube
Michael J. Strube Washington University in St. Louis

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