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  Vol. 58 No. 5, May 2001 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Neuroimaging of Pediatric Neuropsychiatric Disorders

Is a Picture Really Worth a Thousand Words?

Arch Gen Psychiatry. 2001;58:443-444.

Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text and any section headings.

THE ARTICLE by Peterson et al1 illustrates many pediatric neuroimaging advances of the last decade and highlights many of the neuroimaging challenges yet to be faced. Strong features of the study include a large sample size; careful attention to subject and control characterization, scan acquisition, and image analysis; and recognition of the importance of age and gender effects on brain morphometry.

A central tenet of structural imaging studies is that size matters. Critics of the principle contend that the unimportance of size within a broad range of extremes is demonstrated by healthy children with similar IQs having as much as a 50% difference in brain volume,2 robust differences in brain sizes between males and females with similar functional capacity, and the paucity of established correlations between the size of any given brain structure and cognitive abilities. However, from a computational science perspective it seems likely that the number of neuronal . . . [Full Text of this Article]


RELATED ARTICLE

Regional Brain and Ventricular Volumes in Tourette Syndrome
Bradley S. Peterson, Lawrence Staib, Lawrence Scahill, Heping Zhang, Carol Anderson, James F. Leckman, Donald J. Cohen, John C. Gore, John Albert, and Rebecca Webster
Arch Gen Psychiatry. 2001;58(5):427-440.
ABSTRACT | FULL TEXT  






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