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Neuroscience

D-Index
51
Citations
14296
World Ranking
5445
National Ranking
2425

Overview

Kenneth L. Casey is affiliated with the University of Michigan-Ann Arbor in the United States. Their research primarily spans the field of Medicine, with a focus on several subfields including Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health, Cognitive Neuroscience, General Health Professions, Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine, and Transplantation.

Their main topics of study cover a range of issues related to healthcare and biological systems, encompassing:

  • Neurobiology of Language and Bilingualism
  • Interpreting and Communication in Healthcare
  • Tracheal and Airway Disorders
  • Organ Donation and Transplantation
  • Palliative Care and End-of-Life Issues
  • Renal Transplantation Outcomes and Treatments

Casey has contributed to publications in venues such as:

  • Disability and Rehabilitation
  • American Journal of Transplantation

Recent scholarly articles authored or co-authored by Casey include:

  • "We got there in the end.... somehow, we got there": a qualitative study of healthcare professionals providing care in the community to people with chronic aphasia, and how technology could assist (2023), published in Disability and Rehabilitation
  • What is visible is fixable: Visual dashboards for multi-domain assessment of organ procurement organization performance (2023), published in American Journal of Transplantation

Casey's collaborations are reflected in frequent co-authors such as:

  • Robyn O'Halloran
  • Maayken E. L. van den Berg
  • Miranda L. Rose
  • Brianna Doby
  • Katie Ross-Driscoll

The research interests and collaborations indicate an interdisciplinary approach intersecting clinical practice, healthcare communication, and biomedical research with particular attention to chronic conditions, organ transplantation, and healthcare technology.

Best Publications

  • Placebo-induced changes in FMRI in the anticipation and experience of pain.

    Tor D. Wager;James K. Rilling;Edward E. Smith;Alex Sokolik

  • Pain measurement: an overview

    C. R. Chapman;K. L. Casey;R. Dubner;K. M. Foley

  • Keeping pain out of mind: the role of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex in pain modulation.

    Jürgen Lorenz;S. Minoshima;K. L. Casey

  • Positron emission tomographic analysis of cerebral structures activated specifically by repetitive noxious heat stimuli

    Kenneth L. Casey;Satoshi Minoshima;Kevin L. Berger;Robert A. Koeppe

  • Comparison of human cerebral activation pattern during cutaneous warmth, heat pain, and deep cold pain

    Kenneth L. Casey;Satoshi Minoshima;Thomas J. Morrow;Robert A. Koeppe

  • Forebrain mechanisms of nociception and pain: analysis through imaging.

    Kenneth L. Casey

  • Gender differences in pain perception and patterns of cerebral activation during noxious heat stimulation in humans

    Pamela E Paulson;Satoshi Minoshima;Thomas J Morrow;Kenneth L Casey

  • Cerebral processing of acute skin and muscle pain in humans.

    Peter Svensson;Satoshi Minoshima;Ahmad Beydoun;Thomas J. Morrow;Thomas J. Morrow

  • Perception of noxious and innocuous heat stimulation among healthy women and women with fibromyalgia: association with mood, somatic focus, and catastrophizing.

    Michael E Geisser;Kenneth L Casey;Christine B Brucksch;Christine M Ribbens

  • Variability of laser-evoked potentials: attention, arousal and lateralized differences

    Ahmad A. Beydoun;Ahmad A. Beydoun;Thomas J. Morrow;Thomas J. Morrow;Joanne F. Shen;Joanne F. Shen;Kenneth L. Casey;Kenneth L. Casey

  • Unit analysis of nociceptive mechanisms in the thalamus of the awake squirrel monkey.

    K L Casey

  • A Unique Representation of Heat Allodynia in the Human Brain

    Jürgen Lorenz;Jürgen Lorenz;Donna J. Cross;Satoshi Minoshima;Thomas J. Morrow

  • Selective Opiate Modulation of Nociceptive Processing in the Human Brain

    Kenneth L. Casey;Peter Svensson;Thomas J. Morrow;Jonathan Raz

  • Somatic stimuli, spinal pathways, and size of cutaneous fibers influencing unit activity in the medial medulary reticular formation ☆

    Kenneth L. Casey

  • Thermoreceptive innervation of human glabrous and hairy skin: a contact heat evoked potential analysis.

    Yelena Granovsky;Dagfinn Matre;Dagfinn Matre;Dagfinn Matre;Alexander Sokolik;Alexander Sokolik;Jürgen Lorenz;Jürgen Lorenz

  • Temporal and Spatial Dynamics of Human Forebrain Activity During Heat Pain: Analysis by Positron Emission Tomography

    Kenneth L. Casey;Thomas J. Morrow;Jürgen Lorenz;Satoshi Minoshima

  • Placebo-Induced Changes in Spinal Cord Pain Processing

    Dagfinn Matre;Kenneth L. Casey;Stein Knardahl;Stein Knardahl

  • Relative reinforcing strength of three N-methyl-D-aspartate antagonists with different onsets of action.

    G. Winger;S. R. Hursh;K. L. Casey;J. H. Woods

  • Placebo effects in laser-evoked pain potentials.

    Tor D. Wager;Dagfinn Matre;Kenneth L. Casey

  • Somatosensory responses of bulboreticular units in awake cat: relation to escape-producing stimuli.

    Kenneth L. Casey

  • Medial frontal cortex lesions selectively attenuate the hot plate response: possible nocifensive apraxia in the rat.

    Laura N. Pastoriza;Thomas J. Morrow;Thomas J. Morrow;Kenneth L. Casey;Kenneth L. Casey

Frequent Co-Authors

Thomas J. Morrow
Thomas J. Morrow University of Michigan–Ann Arbor
Frederick Lenz
Frederick Lenz Johns Hopkins University
William D. Willis
William D. Willis The University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston
Edward G. Jones
Edward G. Jones University of California, Davis
Ahmad Beydoun
Ahmad Beydoun American University of Beirut
Antti Pertovaara
Antti Pertovaara University of Helsinki
Tor D. Wager
Tor D. Wager Dartmouth College
Robert P. Yezierski
Robert P. Yezierski University of Florida
Robert A. Koeppe
Robert A. Koeppe University of Michigan–Ann Arbor
Herta Flor
Herta Flor Heidelberg University

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