World's Best Scientists 2026 revealed!

D-Index & Metrics

Neuroscience

D-Index
81
Citations
20586
World Ranking
1591
National Ranking
779

Overview

Herbert G. Vaughan was affiliated with the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in the United States. Their research primarily focused on the field of neuroscience, with particular emphasis on neurology, behavioral neuroscience, and cellular and molecular neuroscience. Throughout their career, they contributed to the understanding of complex brain functions and mechanisms related to various neurological processes.

Their work covered several topics including:

  • Stress Responses and Cortisol
  • Barrier Structure and Function Studies
  • Neuroinflammation and Neurodegeneration Mechanisms
  • Neuroscience and Neuropharmacology Research

Herbert G. Vaughan authored research published in venues such as Brain Communications and bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory). Two notable papers from 2025 are:

  • Multiregional blood-brain barrier phenotyping identifies the prefrontal cortex as the most vulnerable region to ageing in mice, Brain Communications
  • Multiregional blood-brain barrier phenotyping identifies the prefrontal cortex as the most vulnerable region to ageing in mice, bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)

Their collaborative network included frequent coauthors like Isabel Bravo-Ferrer, Katrine Gaasdal-Bech, Chiara Colvin, Jonathan Moss, and Anna Williams, each contributing jointly to multiple works.

Herbert G. Vaughan's research advanced knowledge in understanding the vulnerabilities of the brain's blood-brain barrier, particularly focusing on regional differences in ageing. This work supported investigations into neurological vulnerability, barrier functions, and associated molecular pathways.

While no awards or book publications were recorded, their scholarly contributions intersected key subfields of neuroscience, supporting ongoing studies in brain health, aging, and neurodegenerative disease mechanisms.

Best Publications

  • The sources of auditory evoked responses recorded from the human scalp

    Herbert G. Vaughan;Walter Ritter

  • Orienting and habituation to auditory stimuli: A study of short terms changes in average evoked responses

    Walter Ritter;Herbert G. Vaughan;Louis D. Costa

  • Topography of the human motor potential

    Herbert G Vaughan;Louis D Costa;Walter Ritter

  • Event-related potential correlates of two stages of information processing in physical and semantic discrimination tasks.

    Walter Ritter;Richard Simson;Herbert G. Vaughan

  • The scalp topography of potentials in auditory and visual discrimination tasks

    Richard Simson;Herbert G Vaughan;Walter Ritter

  • A Brain Event Related to the Making of a Sensory Discrimination.

    Walter Ritter;Richard Simson;Herbert G. Vaughan;David Friedman

  • The scalp topography of potentials in auditory and visual Go/NoGo tasks ☆

    Richard Simson;Herbert G Vaughan;Walter Ritter

  • Differentiation of negative event-related potentials in an auditory discrimination task.

    Gerald P. Novak;Walter Ritter;Herbert G. Vaughan;Max L. Wiznitzer

  • Summated human EEG potentials with voluntary movement.

    L. Gilden;H.G. Vaughan;L.D. Costa

  • Manipulation of Event-Related Potential Manifestations of Information Processing Stages

    Walter Ritter;Richard Simson;Herbert G. Vaughan;Michael Macht

  • The scalp topography of potentials associated with missing visual or auditory stimuli

    Richard Simson;Herbert G Vaughan;Ritter Walter

  • Topography and intracranial sources of somatosensory evoked potentials in the monkey. I. Early components.

    J.C. Arezzo;H.G. Vaughan;A.D. Legatt

  • Averaged Evoked Responses in Vigilance and Discrimination: A Reassessment

    Walter Ritter;Herbert G. Vaughan

  • Association cortex potentials and reaction time in auditory discrimination.

    Walter Ritter;Richard Simson;Herbert G Vaughan

  • The functional relation of visual evoked response and reaction time to stimulus intensity.

    H.G. Vaughan;L.D. Costa;L. Gilden

  • Impairment of early cortical processing in schizophrenia: an event-related potential confirmation study.

    D.C. Javitt;P. Doneshka;I. Zylberman;W. Ritter

  • Cognitive and Neurologic Development of the Premature, Small for Gestational Age Infant Through Age 6: Comparison by Birth Weight and Gestational Age

    Cecelia M. McCarton;Ina F. Wallace;Michael Divon;Herbert G. Vaughan

  • Anatomical and physiological substrates of event-related potentials. Two case studies.

    Charles C. Wood;Gregory McCARTHY;Nancy K. Squires;Herbert G. Vaughan

  • The mismatch negativity of event-related potentials as a probe of transient auditory memory: a review.

    Walter Ritter;Diana Deacon;Hilary Gomes;Daniel C. Javitt

  • Averaged multiple unit activity as an estimate of phasic changes in local neuronal activity: effects of volume-conducted potentials

    Alan D. Legatt;Joseph Arezzo;Herbert G. Vaughan

Frequent Co-Authors

Walter Ritter
Walter Ritter Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research
Joseph C. Arezzo
Joseph C. Arezzo Albert Einstein College of Medicine
Charles E. Schroeder
Charles E. Schroeder Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research
Mitchell Steinschneider
Mitchell Steinschneider Albert Einstein College of Medicine
Daniel C. Javitt
Daniel C. Javitt Columbia University
Craig E. Tenke
Craig E. Tenke Columbia University
David Friedman
David Friedman Columbia University
Elyse Sussman
Elyse Sussman Albert Einstein College of Medicine
John J. Foxe
John J. Foxe University of Rochester
Ashesh D. Mehta
Ashesh D. Mehta Feinstein Institute for Medical Research

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Best Scientists Citing Herbert G. Vaughan