Neuroimaging/Related Articles: Difference between revisions
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==Other related topics== | ==Other related topics== | ||
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Revision as of 23:52, 20 August 2008
- See also changes related to Neuroimaging, or pages that link to Neuroimaging or to this page or whose text contains "Neuroimaging".
Parent topics
- Neuroscience [r]: The study of nervous systems and their components. [e]
- Brain [r]: The core unit of a central nervous system. [e]
- Imaging [r]: The generation of visual representations of objects, situations or processes, even when the methods used to generate the image are outside the sensitivity of the human eye. [e]
- Medicine [r]: The study of health and disease of the human body. [e]
- Medical imaging [r]: The generation of visual representations of clinically relevant objects. [e]
- Biomedical imaging [r]: The generation of visual representations of clinically or biologically relevant objects. [e]
Subtopics
- Computed tomography [r]: An imaging technique that computes three-dimensional representations of an object from a series of two-dimensional x-ray images. [e]
- Electroencephalography [r]: A technique that records brain electrical activity non-invasively. [e]
- Functional magnetic resonance imaging [r]: A neuroimaging technique used to monitor task-specific blood oxygenation, primarily in the brain. [e]
- Positron emission tomography [r]: A medical imaging technique using compounds labelled with short-lived positron-emitting radionuclides (such as carbon-11, nitrogen-13, oxygen-15 and fluorine-18) to measure cell metabolism. [e]
- Nuclear medicine [r]: That medical specialty, or subspecialty, concerned with diagnosis and treatment using radioisotopes administered to the patient [e]
- Medical physics [r]: The study of medical problems with methods borrowed or derived from physics [e]
- Biomedical engineering [r]: The application of engineering principles to the study and manipulation of biological systems and to the support of health care. [e]
- Biophysics [r]: The study of forces and energies in biological systems. [e]