Dr. Mekibib Altaye, PhD

Asst. Professor of Pediatrics

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Mekibib Altaye is a biostatistician by training with B.s. degree in Statistics from Addis Ababa University, Ethiopia, M.S. degree in statistics from Oklahoma State University, USA and Ph.D. in biostatistics from the University of Western Ontario, Canada. As a post-doctoral fellow at the University of Western Ontario he worked on problems that arise from analyzing correlated data focusing on inter-rater reliability and cluster randomization. Prior coming to Cincinnati, he worked as a biostatistician from 1999-2001 at the Center for Pediatric research, Children's Hospital of the King's Daughter, Norfolk VA. He came to Cincinnati Children's in 2001. His primary appointment is at the center for Epidemiology and Biostatistics and his current research interest includes construction of infant brain template and mixed effect modeling.

Dr. Mark DiFrancesco, PhD

Assistant Professor of Radiology

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Dr. DiFrancesco is a physicist with degrees from Carnegie-Mellon University (BS) and the University of Pittsburgh (MS, PhD). After 15 years of experience in the commercial sector developing medical devices, he joined the IRC in the fall of 2004 to take advantage of an opportunity to train for research in advanced MR imaging and analysis. Recent research activity has included the use of concurrent EEG and fMRI to detect functional correlates of spontaneous brain activity, the study of the neurocognitive effects of Lupus using fMRI, applyiing functional imaging to investigate attentional deficits arising from sleep restriction in adolescents, and assessing the impact of field strength on the quality of small animal brain imaging.

Dr. Scott K. Holland, PhD

McLaurin Scholar and Professor of Radiology, Pediatrics, Biomed. Eng., Neuroscience, Physics

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Scott Holland is a physicist by training with a B.S. degree (1980) in Physics from Muhlenberg College, Allentown, PA. and M.S. (1982) and Ph.D. (1985) degrees in Engineering and Applied Science from Yale University. After a year (1985-86) as a Research Engineer with the Electromagnetic Sciences Laboratory at Stanford Research Institute (SRI International), Menlo Park, CA, Scott returned to the Yale School of Medicine as a post-doctoral fellow (1986-88) and later as an Assistant Professor (1988-94) of Diagnostic Radiology. He joined the faculty of the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine in 1994 as Associate Professor of Radiology and Pediatrics and served as Scientific Director of the Imaging Research Center at Children’s Hospital Medical Center until 2003. His research currently focuses on pediatric neuroimaging applications of MRI at high field; including perfusion MRI, functional MRI, microimaging of transgenic mice, and image processing methods.

Dr. Vincent J. Schmithorst, PhD

Research Assistant Professor

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Dr. Schmithorst is a physicist by training with BS, MS, and PhD degrees from the University of Cincinnati. Schmithorst's thesis was on utilizing an ionizing radiation detector in digital projection radiography to separate bone from soft-tissue components using information from the penetration depth of the x-ray beam. Dr. Schmithorst joined the Imaging Research Center in the Fall of 1997. His current research interests include the investigation of central auditory processing deficits in children with unilateral sensorineural hearing loss using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), the development of language function in children using fMRI, and white matter maturation in children's brains using diffusion tensor imaging (DTI). Additionally, Dr. Schmithorst is interested in the further development of data-driven techniques such as Independent Component Analysis (ICA)for fMRI data analysis; as well as techniques such as structural equation modeling (SEM) or multivariate autoregressive modeling (MAR) for analysis of effective and functional connectivity.

Dr. Jennifer Vannest, PhD

Asst. Professor of Pediatrics

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Dr. Vannest completed her undergraduate education at the Ohio State University and continued there for her graduate work. Her PhD (2001) is in Linguistics, and her graduate training also included background in Cognitive Psychology, Neuropsychology and Speech and Hearing Sciences. As a postdoctoral fellow at University of Michigan and University of Rochester, Dr. Vannest was trained to use functional MRI to study the brain mechanisms underlying language skill. She came to Cincinnati Children's in 2006, and her current research makes use of functional MRI and behavioral testing to examine how epilepsy and neurodevelopmental disorders affect language function, both in terms of language skill and brain circuitry that supports it. These studies are designed with the goal of better treatment and educational strategies for children with these disorders.

Dr. Weihong Yuan, PhD

Research Assistant Professor of Radiology/McLaurin Fellow in Neurosurgery

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Dr. Weihong Yuan was trained in biomedical engineering and received his B. S. degree (1991) from Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, China, and MS (1997) and Ph.D. (2000) from Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey. Dr. Yuan came to the Imaging Research Center and started his neuroimaging post-doctoral fellowship training in April, 2004. In mid 2005, Dr. Yuan joined faculty of IRC/PNRC. Dr. Yuan’s current research interest is focused on diffusion tensor imaging in children with hydrocephalus. He is also interested in the application of various imaging technique (fMRI, DTI) in other pediatric patients, such as children with supratentorial tumor, epilepsy, traumatic brain injury, spina bifida, etc.