J
Jean-Baptiste Poline
Researcher at Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital
Publications - 365
Citations - 37810
Jean-Baptiste Poline is an academic researcher from Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Data sharing & Population. The author has an hindex of 84, co-authored 349 publications receiving 34181 citations. Previous affiliations of Jean-Baptiste Poline include Hammersmith Hospital & French Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Spatial registration and normalization of images
Karl J. Friston,John Ashburner,Chris D. Frith,Jean-Baptiste Poline,Jon D. Heather,Richard S. J. Frackowiak +5 more
TL;DR: A general technique that facilitates nonlinear spatial (stereotactic) normalization and image realignment is presented that minimizes the sum of squares between two images following non linear spatial deformations and transformations of the voxel (intensity) values.
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Analysis of fMRI Time-Series Revisited
Karl J. Friston,Andrew P. Holmes,Jean-Baptiste Poline,P. J. Grasby,Steven Williams,Richard S. J. Frackowiak,Robert Turner +6 more
TL;DR: The approach is predicated on an extension of the general linear model that allows for correlations between error terms due to physiological noise or correlations that ensue after temporal smoothing, and uses the effective degrees of freedom associated with the error term.
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Valid conjunction inference with the minimum statistic.
TL;DR: A survey of recent practice in neuroimaging reveals that the MS/GN test is very often misinterpreted as evidence of a logical AND, and it is suggested that the revised test proposed here is the appropriate means for conjunction inference in Neuroimaging.
Journal ArticleDOI
Detecting Activations in PET and fMRI: Levels of Inference and Power
TL;DR: It is envisaged that set-level inferences will find a role in making statistical inferences about distributed activations, particularly in fMRI.
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Cerebral mechanisms of word masking and unconscious repetition priming.
Stanislas Dehaene,Lionel Naccache,Laurent D. Cohen,Denis Le Bihan,Jean-François Mangin,Jean-Baptiste Poline,Denis Rivière +6 more
TL;DR: Within the areas associated with conscious reading, masked words activated left extrastriate, fusiform and precentral areas and reduced the amount of activation evoked by a subsequent conscious presentation of the same word.