Richard G. Wise mainly investigates Neuroscience, Functional magnetic resonance imaging, Brainstem, Brain mapping and Pathology. His research investigates the connection with Neuroscience and areas like Psychedelic experience which intersect with concerns in Prefrontal cortex. His Functional magnetic resonance imaging research includes elements of Cognitive psychology, Insula, Functional imaging and Wada test.
His work in Brainstem covers topics such as Periaqueductal gray which are related to areas like Chronic pain. His work in Pathology tackles topics such as Magnetic resonance imaging which are related to areas like Blood flow, Cerebral perfusion pressure and Hypoxia. His biological study deals with issues like White matter, which deal with fields such as Anesthesia and Cerebral blood flow.
Richard G. Wise spends much of his time researching Neuroscience, Functional magnetic resonance imaging, Internal medicine, Cerebral blood flow and Anesthesia. His study in Neuroscience concentrates on Human brain, Brain mapping, Brain activity and meditation, Stimulus and Brainstem. His biological study spans a wide range of topics, including Insular cortex, Functional imaging, Neuroimaging and Respiratory system.
His study looks at the relationship between Internal medicine and fields such as Cardiology, as well as how they intersect with chemical problems. His research investigates the link between Cerebral blood flow and topics such as Perfusion that cross with problems in Nuclear medicine. His study in the field of Remifentanil is also linked to topics like Chemistry.
Richard G. Wise spends much of his time researching Cerebral blood flow, Internal medicine, Cardiology, Neuroscience and Human brain. His Cerebral blood flow research incorporates themes from Cerebellum, Blood flow, Blood-oxygen-level dependent, Magnetic resonance imaging and Grey matter. The study incorporates disciplines such as White matter and Multiple sclerosis in addition to Internal medicine.
His study on Cardiology also encompasses disciplines like
His scientific interests lie mostly in Cerebral blood flow, Neuroscience, Internal medicine, Human brain and Cardiology. The various areas that Richard G. Wise examines in his Cerebral blood flow study include Repeatability, Intraclass correlation, Vascular health and Grey matter. When carried out as part of a general Neuroscience research project, his work on Supplementary motor area, Motor cortex and Blood-oxygen-level dependent is frequently linked to work in Cost effectiveness and Age groups, therefore connecting diverse disciplines of study.
His Internal medicine study frequently involves adjacent topics like Thalamus. His biological study spans a wide range of topics, including Working memory, Default mode network, Functional connectivity, Resting state fMRI and Brain activity and meditation. His work deals with themes such as Aerobic exercise, Effects of sleep deprivation on cognitive performance, Cortex and Brainstem, which intersect with Cardiology.
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Imaging how attention modulates pain in humans using functional MRI.
Susanna J. Bantick;Richard G. Wise;Alexander Ploghaus;Stuart Clare.
Brain (2002)
Exacerbation of Pain by Anxiety Is Associated with Activity in a Hippocampal Network
A Ploghaus;C Narain;C F Beckmann;S Clare.
The Journal of Neuroscience (2001)
Neural correlates of the psychedelic state as determined by fMRI studies with psilocybin
Robin L. Carhart-Harris;David Erritzoe;Tim Williams;James M. Stone.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2012)
Resting fluctuations in arterial carbon dioxide induce significant low frequency variations in BOLD signal.
Richard G Wise;Richard G Wise;Kojiro Ide;Marc J Poulin;Irene Tracey;Irene Tracey.
NeuroImage (2004)
Neural correlates of the LSD experience revealed by multimodal neuroimaging
Robin L. Carhart-Harris;Suresh D. Muthukumaraswamy;Suresh D. Muthukumaraswamy;Leor Roseman;Mendel Kaelen.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2016)
A multisensory investigation of the functional significance of the "pain matrix".
André Mouraux;Ana Diukova;Michael C. Lee;Michael C. Lee;Richard Geoffrey Wise.
NeuroImage (2011)
Quantitative fMRI assessment of the differences in lateralization of language-related brain activation in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy
J. E. Adcock;Richard Geoffrey Wise;J. M. Oxbury;S. M. Oxbury.
NeuroImage (2003)
A role for the brainstem in central sensitisation in humans. Evidence from functional magnetic resonance imaging.
L. Zambreanu;Richard Geoffrey Wise;Richard Geoffrey Wise;J. C. W. Brooks;J. C. W. Brooks;Giandomenico Iannetti;Giandomenico Iannetti.
Pain (2005)
A Comparison of Visceral and Somatic Pain Processing in the Human Brainstem Using Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Paul Dunckley;Richard Wise;Merle T. Fairhurst;Peter Hobden.
The Journal of Neuroscience (2005)
Pharmacological modulation of pain-related brain activity during normal and central sensitization states in humans.
G. D. Iannetti;L. Zambreanu;Richard Geoffrey Wise;T. J. Buchanan.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2005)
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