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Neuroscience

D-Index
40
Citations
7566
World Ranking
8034
National Ranking
3453

Overview

Victoria L. Morgan is affiliated with Vanderbilt University Medical Center in the United States. Their research spans significant contributions in the fields of Medicine and Neuroscience, with a focus on various subfields including Cognitive Neuroscience, Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and Imaging, Psychiatry and Mental Health, Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience, and Neurology.

The main topics of their work cover a range of areas related to brain function and neurological conditions. These include Functional Brain Connectivity Studies, Epilepsy Research and Treatment, EEG and Brain-Computer Interfaces, Advanced Neuroimaging Techniques and Applications, Advanced MRI Techniques and Applications, Neural Dynamics and Brain Function, and Neurological Disorders and Treatments.

Victoria L. Morgan has published extensively across multiple respected venues. Their frequent publication venues include Neuromodulation Technology at the Neural Interface, bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory), Epilepsia, Brain, and the Journal of Neurosurgery.

Among their recent papers are:

  • PreQual: An automated pipeline for integrated preprocessing and quality assurance of diffusion weighted MRI images (2021, Magnetic Resonance in Medicine)
  • Seizure-onset regions demonstrate high inward directed connectivity during resting-state: An SEEG study in focal epilepsy (2020, Epilepsia)
  • The Interictal Suppression Hypothesis in focal epilepsy: network-level supporting evidence (2023, Brain)
  • Impaired vigilance networks in temporal lobe epilepsy: Mechanisms and clinical implications (2020, Epilepsia)
  • MRI essentials in epileptology: a review from the ILAE Imaging Taskforce (2020, Epileptic Disorders)

Their collaborative work involves frequent co-authorship with several researchers, including Dario J. Englot, Graham W. Johnson, Catie Chang, Danika Paulo, and Derek J. Doss.

Best Publications

  • Brain Areas Involved in Perception of Biological Motion

    E. Grossman;M. Donnelly;R. Price;D. Pickens

  • Normal human right and left ventricular mass, systolic function, and gender differences by cine magnetic resonance imaging.

    Christine H. Lorenz;Eloisa S. Walker;Victoria L. Morgan;Stacy S. Klein

  • Regional cerebral activation in irritable bowel syndrome and control subjects with painful and nonpainful rectal distention.

    Howard Mertz;Victoria Morgan;Gordon Tanner;David Pickens

  • Assessing functional connectivity in the human brain by fMRI

    Baxter P. Rogers;Victoria L. Morgan;Allen T. Newton;John C. Gore

  • Amitriptyline reduces rectal pain related activation of the anterior cingulate cortex in patients with irritable bowel syndrome.

    V Morgan;D Pickens;S Gautam;R Kessler

  • Regional and global connectivity disturbances in focal epilepsy, related neurocognitive sequelae, and potential mechanistic underpinnings

    Dario J. Englot;Peter E. Konrad;Victoria L. Morgan

  • Spatio-temporal correlation tensors reveal functional structure in human brain.

    Zhaohua Ding;Allen T. Newton;Ran Xu;Adam W. Anderson

  • Modulation of steady state functional connectivity in the default mode and working memory networks by cognitive load

    Allen T. Newton;Victoria L. Morgan;Baxter P. Rogers;John C. Gore

  • Cross Hippocampal Influence in Mesial Temporal Lobe Epilepsy Measured With High Temporal Resolution Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging

    Victoria L. Morgan;Baxter P. Rogers;Hasan H. Sonmezturk;John C. Gore

  • Visualizing Functional Pathways in the Human Brain Using Correlation Tensors and Magnetic Resonance Imaging

    Zhaohua Ding;Ran Xu;Stephen K. Bailey;Tung Lin Wu

  • Resting functional MRI with temporal clustering analysis for localization of epileptic activity without EEG.

    Victoria L. Morgan;Ronald R. Price;Amir Arain;Pradeep Modur

  • The interictal suppression hypothesis in focal epilepsy: network-level supporting evidence.

    Unknown

  • Alterations in default-mode network connectivity may be influenced by cerebrovascular changes within 1 week of sports related concussion in college varsity athletes: a pilot study

    Adam R. Militana;Manus J. Donahue;Allen K. Sills;Gary S. Solomon

  • Lateralization of temporal lobe epilepsy using resting functional magnetic resonance imaging connectivity of hippocampal networks

    Victoria L. Morgan;Hasan H. Sonmezturk;John C. Gore;Bassel Abou-Khalil

  • Evolution of functional connectivity of brain networks and their dynamic interaction in temporal lobe epilepsy.

    Victoria L. Morgan;Bassel Abou-Khalil;Baxter P. Rogers

  • Magnetic resonance imaging connectivity for the prediction of seizure outcome in temporal lobe epilepsy

    Victoria L. Morgan;Dario J. Englot;Baxter P. Rogers;Bennett A. Landman;Bennett A. Landman

  • Resting state functional connectivity of the hippocampus associated with neurocognitive function in left temporal lobe epilepsy

    Martha J. Holmes;Bradley S. Folley;Hasan H. Sonmezturk;John C. Gore

  • Seizure-onset regions demonstrate high inward directed connectivity during resting-state: An SEEG study in focal epilepsy.

    Saramati Narasimhan;Saramati Narasimhan;Keshav B. Kundassery;Kanupriya Gupta;Graham W. Johnson;Graham W. Johnson

  • Comparison of fMRI statistical software packages and strategies for analysis of images containing random and stimulus-correlated motion.

    Victoria L. Morgan;Benoit M. Dawant;Yong Li;David R. Pickens

  • Impaired vigilance networks in temporal lobe epilepsy: Mechanisms and clinical implications.

    Dario J. Englot;Victoria L. Morgan;Catie Chang;Catie Chang

  • Integrating functional and diffusion magnetic resonance imaging for analysis of structure-function relationship in the human language network.

    Victoria L. Morgan;Arabinda Mishra;Allen T. Newton;John C. Gore

  • Task demand modulation of steady‐state functional connectivity to primary motor cortex

    Allen T. Newton;Victoria L. Morgan;John C. Gore

  • Functional epileptic network in left mesial temporal lobe epilepsy detected using resting fMRI

    Victoria L. Morgan;John C. Gore;Bassel Abou-Khalil

Frequent Co-Authors

Baxter P. Rogers
Baxter P. Rogers Vanderbilt University
Dario J. Englot
Dario J. Englot Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Bassel Abou-Khalil
Bassel Abou-Khalil Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Catie Chang
Catie Chang Vanderbilt University
Boris C. Bernhardt
Boris C. Bernhardt Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital
Andrea Bernasconi
Andrea Bernasconi Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital
Fernando Cendes
Fernando Cendes State University of Campinas
Graeme D. Jackson
Graeme D. Jackson Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health
John D. Rolston
John D. Rolston University of Utah
Warren D. Taylor
Warren D. Taylor Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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