Connection

Co-Authors

This is a "connection" page, showing publications co-authored by Janina Wilmskoetter and Leonardo Bonilha.
Connection Strength

6.116
  1. Language Recovery after Brain Injury: A Structural Network Control Theory Study. J Neurosci. 2022 01 26; 42(4):657-669.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.822
  2. Indirect White Matter Pathways Are Associated With Treated Naming Improvement in Aphasia. Neurorehabil Neural Repair. 2021 04; 35(4):346-355.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.781
  3. Long-range fibre damage in small vessel brain disease affects aphasia severity. Brain. 2019 10 01; 142(10):3190-3201.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.707
  4. Predicting naming responses based on pre-articulatory electrical activity in individuals with aphasia. Clin Neurophysiol. 2019 11; 130(11):2153-2163.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.702
  5. Neuroanatomical structures supporting lexical diversity, sophistication, and phonological word features during discourse. Neuroimage Clin. 2019; 24:101961.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.698
  6. Advanced Brain Age and Chronic Poststroke Aphasia Severity. Neurology. 2023 Mar 14; 100(11):e1166-e1176.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.221
  7. White matter hyperintensity load is associated with premature brain aging. Aging (Albany NY). 2022 Nov 30; 14.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.220
  8. Neural network bases of thematic semantic processing in language production. Cortex. 2022 11; 156:126-143.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.217
  9. The role of disrupted structural connectivity in aphasia. Handb Clin Neurol. 2022; 185:121-127.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.207
  10. High b-value diffusion tractography: Abnormal axonal network organization associated with medication-refractory epilepsy. Neuroimage. 2022 03; 248:118866.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.206
  11. Cortical microstructural changes associated with treated aphasia recovery. Ann Clin Transl Neurol. 2021 09; 8(9):1884-1894.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.201
  12. The relationship between dorsal stream connections to the caudate and verbal fluency in Parkinson disease. Brain Imaging Behav. 2021 Aug; 15(4):2121-2125.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.190
  13. Neural structures supporting spontaneous and assisted (entrained) speech fluency. Brain. 2019 12 01; 142(12):3951-3962.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.179
  14. Factors Influencing Oral Intake Improvement and Feeding Tube Dependency in Patients with Poststroke Dysphagia. J Stroke Cerebrovasc Dis. 2019 Jun; 28(6):1421-1430.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.171
  15. Mapping acute lesion locations to physiological swallow impairments after stroke. Neuroimage Clin. 2019; 22:101685.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.168
  16. Fibroblast growth factor23 is associated with axonal integrity and neural network architecture in the human frontal lobes. PLoS One. 2018; 13(9):e0203460.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.164
  17. Differences in swallow physiology in patients with left and right hemispheric strokes. Physiol Behav. 2018 10 01; 194:144-152.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.160
  18. The relationship between motor pathway damage and flexion-extension patterns of muscle co-excitation during walking. Front Neurol. 2022; 13:968385.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.055
  19. High-Density EEG in Current Clinical Practice and Opportunities for the Future. J Clin Neurophysiol. 2021 Mar 01; 38(2):112-123.
    View in: PubMed
    Score: 0.049
Connection Strength

The connection strength for concepts is the sum of the scores for each matching publication.

Publication scores are based on many factors, including how long ago they were written and whether the person is a first or senior author.