600 babies… piece of cake!
The dHCP completes 600 neonatal scans. To mark our 600th neonatal scan, the team at King’s College London had an in house celebration! Project’s Chief Investigator, Professor David Edwards, joined the team in celebration.
The dHCP completes 600 neonatal scans. To mark our 600th neonatal scan, the team at King’s College London had an in house celebration! Project’s Chief Investigator, Professor David Edwards, joined the team in celebration.
WIRED coverage of the Project’s first data release which includes representative images from the project’s processing pipelines. http://www.wired.co.uk/gallery/developing-human-connectome-project
The Guardian Science Editor, Ian Sample spoke to Professor Jo Hajnal, Project’s Principle Investigator at King’s College London; about the project, the data release and challenges of MR imaging in newborns. https://www.theguardian.com/science/2017/may/10/project-to-map-human-brain-from-womb-to-birth-releases-stunning-images
BBC coverage of the Developing Human Connectome Project’s first data release. The Project’s Chief Investigator, Professor David Edwards, explains the importance of the open access data release. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-39854654
Scientists today have published ground-breaking scans of newborn babies’ brains which researchers from all over the world can download and use to study how the human brain develops. The images represent the first public outputs of this project, which will … Continued