Hadi T. Nia, Junior Faculty member at the Neurophotonics and Photonics Centers, announced today that his team had two articles published back-to-back in ScienceDirect. The first article, “Multiscale elasticity mapping of biological samples in 3D at optical resolution”, published by Kathryn Regas et. al, presents a new platform: “µElastography,” a “scalable elastography system that maps […]
Professors Boas and Cheng were recently published in the Optica Publishing Group’s “Biomedical Optics Express” for their team’s research on “Dynamic light scattering and laser speckle contrast imaging of the brain: theory of the spatial and temporal statistics of speckle pattern evolution”
In Vol. 28 / No. 11, Professor Mertz and team were featured for their article on “Multiplane HiLo microscopy with speckle illumination and non-local means denoising”
Professor Sander and team were recently published for their research on “Time-Resolved Mid-Infrared Photothermal Microscopy for Imaging Water-Embedded Axon Bundles”
Professor Thunemann et al. were recently published in nature protocols for their piece on “Construction and use of an adaptive optics two-photon microscope with direct wavefront sensing” ABSTRACT: Two-photon microscopy, combined with the appropriate optical labelling, enables the measurement and tracking of submicrometer structures within brain cells, as well as the spatiotemporal mapping of spikes […]
Professors Bigio, Boas, et al. were recently published in OPTICA for an article on “Multiscale label-free imaging of myelin in human brain tissue with polarization-sensitive optical coherence tomography and birefringence microscopy” ABSTRACT The combination of polarization-sensitive optical coherence tomography (PS-OCT) and birefringence microscopy (BRM) enables multiscale assessment of myelinated axons in postmortem brain tissue, and […]
PhD scholar Qing Xia worked among professors Cheng, Connor, Ünlü et al. in nature communications’ recent article on “Single virus fingerprinting by widefield interferometric defocus-enhanced mid-infrared photothermal microscopy”
Professor Xue Han served as the corresponding author in Frontier’s recent article: “The autism spectrum disorder risk gene NEXMIF over-synchronizes hippocampal CA1 network and alters neuronal coding.” The viewable publication is set to be finalized soon. ABSTRACT Mutations in autism spectrum disorder (ASD) risk genes disrupt neural network dynamics that ultimately lead to abnormal behavior. […]
Professors Xiaojun Cheng and David Boas were recently published for their article on “Measuring human cerebral blood flow and brain function with fiber-based speckle contrast optical spectroscopy system”