World's Best Scientists 2026 revealed!

D-Index & Metrics

Neuroscience

D-Index
63
Citations
10463
World Ranking
3450
National Ranking
1594

Overview

What is he best known for?

The fields of study he is best known for:

  • Internal medicine
  • Cognition
  • Psychiatry

His main research concerns Epilepsy, Temporal lobe, Audiology, Psychometrics and Psychiatry. His work deals with themes such as Quality of life, Central nervous system disease and Pediatrics, which intersect with Epilepsy. His Temporal lobe study incorporates themes from Cognitive psychology, Hippocampus and Epilepsy surgery.

Roy C. Martin interconnects Developmental psychology, Vision test, Dementia and Visual memory in the investigation of issues within Audiology. His Psychometrics research is multidisciplinary, incorporating perspectives in Memory disorder, Severity of illness, Longitudinal study and Cohort study. His work investigates the relationship between Psychiatry and topics such as Internal medicine that intersect with problems in Endocrinology.

His most cited work include:

  • Cognitive effects of topiramate, gabapentin, and lamotrigine in healthy young adults (314 citations)
  • Complex visual disturbances in Alzheimer's disease (268 citations)
  • Improved health care resource utilization following video-eeg-confirmed diagnosis of nonepileptic psychogenic seizures (207 citations)

What are the main themes of his work throughout his whole career to date?

The scientist’s investigation covers issues in Epilepsy, Temporal lobe, Cognition, Audiology and Psychiatry. Nuclear medicine is closely connected to Central nervous system disease in his research, which is encompassed under the umbrella topic of Epilepsy. His research in Temporal lobe intersects with topics in Verbal memory, Hippocampus and Surgery.

He has included themes like Hippocampal formation and Amygdala in his Hippocampus study. Roy C. Martin regularly ties together related areas like Clinical psychology in his Cognition studies. His study in Audiology is interdisciplinary in nature, drawing from both Developmental psychology, Memoria and Visual memory.

He most often published in these fields:

  • Epilepsy (39.58%)
  • Temporal lobe (28.65%)
  • Cognition (19.27%)

What were the highlights of his more recent work (between 2016-2021)?

  • Cognition (19.27%)
  • Epilepsy (39.58%)
  • Finance (8.33%)

In recent papers he was focusing on the following fields of study:

Roy C. Martin focuses on Cognition, Epilepsy, Finance, Logistic regression and Audiology. Roy C. Martin combines subjects such as Activities of daily living and Clinical psychology with his study of Cognition. His Epilepsy research is multidisciplinary, incorporating elements of Working memory, Cannabidiol and Comorbidity.

His studies deal with areas such as Ictal, Verbal memory, Temporal lobe and Elementary cognitive task as well as Working memory. His work carried out in the field of Logistic regression brings together such families of science as Psychological intervention, Retrospective cohort study and Pediatrics. His Audiology research includes themes of Verbal learning and Neuroimaging.

Between 2016 and 2021, his most popular works were:

  • FMRI response to acute psychological stress differentiates patients with psychogenic non-epileptic seizures from healthy controls - A biochemical and neuroimaging biomarker study. (16 citations)
  • Cognitive functioning following long-term cannabidiol use in adults with treatment-resistant epilepsy. (11 citations)
  • Risk of pharmacokinetic interactions between antiepileptic and other drugs in older persons and factors associated with risk. (11 citations)

In his most recent research, the most cited papers focused on:

  • Internal medicine
  • Cognition
  • Psychiatry

Roy C. Martin spends much of his time researching Epilepsy, Logistic regression, Cognition, Medical prescription and Pediatrics. His Epilepsy study frequently intersects with other fields, such as Comorbidity. His Logistic regression research includes elements of Psychological intervention and Gerontology.

As part of his studies on Cognition, he frequently links adjacent subjects like Activities of daily living. He has researched Medical prescription in several fields, including Retrospective cohort study, Concordance, Levetiracetam, Concomitant and Drug. His biological study spans a wide range of topics, including Audiology and Episodic memory.

Best Publications

  • Cognitive effects of topiramate, gabapentin, and lamotrigine in healthy young adults

    R. Martin;R. Kuzniecky;S. Ho;H. Hetherington

  • Complex visual disturbances in Alzheimer's disease

    M. F. Mendez;M. A. Mendez;R. Martin;K. A. Smyth

  • Improved health care resource utilization following video-eeg-confirmed diagnosis of nonepileptic psychogenic seizures

    Roy C. Martin;Frank G. Gilliam;Meridith Kilgore;Edward Faught

  • Declining financial capacity in mild cognitive impairment: A 1-year longitudinal study

    K. L. Triebel;R. Martin;H. R. Griffith;J. Marceaux

  • Modulation of cerebral GABA by topiramate, lamotrigine, and gabapentin in healthy adults

    Ruben Kuzniecky;S Ho;J Pan;R Martin

  • Incidence and prevalence of epilepsy among older US Medicare beneficiaries

    Edward Faught;Joshua Richman;Roy Martin;E. Funkhouser

  • Frequency of epilepsy in patients with psychogenic seizures monitored by video-EEG.

    R. Martin;J.G. Burneo;A. Prasad;T. Powell

  • Patient-oriented outcome assessment after temporal lobectomy for refractory epilepsy

    F. Gilliam;R. Kuzniecky;K. Meador;R. Martin

  • Psychometric construction of the Rey-Osterrieth Complex Figure: methodological considerations and interrater reliability.

    David W. Loring;Roy C. Martin;Kimford J. Meador;Gregory P. Lee

  • Determining Reliable Cognitive Change after Epilepsy Surgery: Development of Reliable Change Indices and Standardized Regression‐based Change Norms for the WMS‐III and WAIS‐III

    Roy Martin;Stephen Sawrie;Frank Gilliam;Melissa Mackey

  • Taking charge of epilepsy: the development of a structured psychoeducational group intervention for adolescents with epilepsy and their parents.

    Kara Snead;Joseph Ackerson;Kirstin Bailey;Margaret M. Schmitt

  • Topiramate increases cerebral GABA in healthy humans

    R. Kuzniecky;H. Hetherington;S. Ho;J. Pan

  • Clinical Interview Assessment of Financial Capacity in Older Adults with Mild Cognitive Impairment and Alzheimer's Disease

    Daniel C. Marson;Roy C. Martin;Virginia Wadley;H. Randall Griffith

  • Individual memory change after anterior temporal lobectomy: a base rate analysis using regression-based outcome methodology.

    Roy C. Martin;Stephen M. Sawrie;David L. Roth;Frank G. Gilliam

  • Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopic Imaging in Temporal Lobe Epilepsy: Neuronal Dysfunction or Cell Loss?

    Ruben Kuzniecky;Cheryl Palmer;James Hugg;Roy Martin

  • The intracarotid amobarbital procedure as a predictor of memory failure following unilateral temporal lobectomy.

    David W. Loring;G. P. Lee;K. J. Meador;H. F. Flanigin

  • Rey's 15-item visual memory test for the detection of malingering: Normative observations on patients with neurological disorders.

    Gregory P. Lee;David W. Loring;Roy C. Martin

  • Hippocampal 1H-MRSI correlates with severity of depression symptoms in temporal lobe epilepsy.

    F. G. Gilliam;B. M. Maton;R. C. Martin;S. M. Sawrie

  • The effects of lateralized temporal lobe dysfunction on normal and semantic word fluency

    Roy C. Martin;David W. Loring;Kimford J. Meador;Gregory P. Lee

  • Subjective versus objective memory change after temporal lobe epilepsy surgery

    S.M. Sawrie;R.C. Martin;R. Kuzniecky;E. Faught

Frequent Co-Authors

Ruben Kuzniecky
Ruben Kuzniecky Hofstra University
Daniel C. Marson
Daniel C. Marson University of Alabama at Birmingham
Robert C. Knowlton
Robert C. Knowlton University of California, San Francisco
Edward Faught
Edward Faught Emory University
Frank Gilliam
Frank Gilliam The University of Texas Rio Grande Valley
David W. Loring
David W. Loring Emory University
Jerzy P. Szaflarski
Jerzy P. Szaflarski University of Alabama at Birmingham
Kimford J. Meador
Kimford J. Meador Stanford University
Gregory P. Lee
Gregory P. Lee Augusta University
Ozioma C. Okonkwo
Ozioma C. Okonkwo University of Wisconsin–Madison

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