Publications of Robert Trampel

Journal Article (4)

2021
Journal Article
Brammerloh, M.; Morawski, M.; Friedrich, I.; Reinert, T.; Lange, C.; Pelicon, P.; Vavpetič, P.; Jankuhn, S.; Jäger, C.; Alkemade, A. et al.; Balesar, R.; Pine, K.; Gavriilidis, F.; Trampel, R.; Reimer, E.; Arendt, T.; Weiskopf, N.; Kirilina, E.: Measuring the iron content of dopaminergic neurons in substantia nigra with MRI relaxometry. NeuroImage 239, 118255 (2021)
2020
Journal Article
Attar, F. M.; Kirilina, E.; Haenelt, D.; Pine, K.; Trampel, R.; Edwards, L.; Weiskopf, N.: Mapping short association fibers in the early cortical visual processing stream using in vivo diffusion tractography. Cerebral Cortex 30 (8), pp. 4496 - 4514 (2020)
2015
Journal Article
Huber, L.; Goense, J.; Kennerley, A. J.; Trampel, R.; Guidi, M.; Ivanov, D.; Neef, N.; Gauthier, C.; Turner, R.; Möller, H. E.: Cortical lamina-dependent blood volume changes in human brain at 7 T. NeuroImage 107, pp. 23 - 33 (2015)
2014
Journal Article
Strotmann, B.; Heidemann, R. M.; Anwander, A.; Weiss, M.; Trampel, R.; Villringer, A.; Turner, R.: High-resolution MRI and diffusion-weighted imaging of the human habenula at 7 tesla. Journal of Magnetic Resonance Imaging 39 (4), pp. 1018 - 1026 (2014)

Talk (1)

2014
Talk
Huber, L.; Goense, J. B. M.; Kennerley, A.; Trampel, R.; Guidi, M.; Gauthier, C.; Turner, R.; Möller, H. E.: Layer-dependent CBV and BOLD responses in humans, monkeys, and rats at 7T. ISMRM Workshop on Functional MRI: Emerging Techniques and New Interpretations, Charleston, SC, USA (2014)

Poster (2)

2015
Poster
Huber, L.; Goense, J. B. M.; Kennerley, A.; Guidi, M.; Trampel, R.; Turner, R.; Möller, H. E.: Micro- and macrovascular contributions to layer-dependent blood volume fMRI: A multi-modal, multi-species comparison. 23rd Annual Meeting of the International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine, Toronto, ON, Canada (2015)
Poster
Huber, L.; Guidi, M.; Goense, J. B. M.; Mildner, T.; Trampel, R.; Schulz, J.; Eichner, C.; Turner, R.; Möller, H. E.: The magnitude point spread function is an inadequate measure of T2*-blurring in EPI. 23rd Annual Meeting of the International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine, Toronto, ON, Canada (2015)
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