Directory | News | Giving | Maps/Directions

Health sciences Research & education Patient care
School of Medicine Research

Volunteering  |  Jobs  |  FAQs  |  Biomed Library  |  Site Map  |  Contact Us

About Us
Education
Admissions
Research
Departments
Faculty Search
Administration
Resources for Faculty
Resources for Residents
Resources for Medical Students
Graduate Student Education
Alumni
Community Outreach
Clinical Trials
resources faculty search core facilities funding
Paul Thompson, Ph.D.
Affiliations
Professor, Neurology
Member, Neuroengineering Training Program, Neuroscience Graduate Program, Brain Research Institute
Education:
Degree: Ph.D., UCLA
Contact Information:
Email Address: thompson@loni.ucla.edu
Laboratory Address: Laboratory Address
Neuroscience Research Bldg, NRB 225E
635 Charles Young Drive
Los Angeles, CA 90095
UNITED STATES
Home Page: http://www.loni.ucla.edu/~thompson/thompson.html
Laboratory: http://www.loni.ucla.edu/~thompson/students.html
Work: http://www.loni.ucla.edu/~thompson/projects.html
Office: http://www.loni.ucla.edu/~thompson/thompson_pubs.html
Direct Contact Information:
Work Phone Number: 310-206-2101 Office
Technical Research Interest:
Mapping Brain Diseases with Neuroimaging

Paul Thompson is a Professor in the Department of Neurology and Biomedical Engineering Program at UCLA. His team's research projects focus on the neuroscience, mathematics, computer science, software engineering and clinical aspects of neuroimaging and brain mapping. Dr. Thompson obtained his M.A. in Mathematics and Classical Languages from Oxford University, England, and his Ph.D. in Neuroscience from UCLA. Dr. Thompson's team of 15 researchers includes students in neuroscience, biomedical engineering, and biomedical physics. Recent awards include the Fulbright and Hughes Fellowships (1993-1998), the Turken Award for Alzheimer's Disease research (2003), and six active NIH grants that support neuroimaging research. Collaborating with 40 imaging labs around the world, Dr. Thompson and his students have published over 200 articles describing novel mathematical and computational strategies for analyzing brain image databases, for detecting pathology in individual patients and groups, and for creating disease-specific atlases of the human brain. Recent work has discovered new structural and functional brain changes during brain development and degeneration, Alzheimer's Disease and other dementias, schizophrenia and bipolar illness, HIV/AIDS, methamphetamine abuse, and autism. We also study the genetic brain disorders of Fragile X syndrome, VCFS, and Williams syndrome. For many of these illnesses, we are creating population-based digital brain atlases. New computational tools, developed in the lab, are used to map how these diseases spread in the living brain, and in drug trials and basic research studies. We also have very active projects on diffusion tensor imaging of twins (to map gene effects on the brain), as well as high-field brain imaging, and medical image analysis. In more clinically-oriented projects, imaging approaches are tracking therapeutic response to antipsychotic drugs in schizophrenia, and medication effects in dementia. These collaborative projects combine the talents of students and postdoctoral researchers in neuroscience, engineering, mathematics, and clinical neurology. Lab home page: http://www.loni.ucla.edu/~thompson/thompson.html


Additional Information:

Neuroimaging and brain mapping Paul Thompson is a Professor in the Department of Neurology and Biomedical Engineering Program at UCLA. His team's research projects focus on the neuroscience, mathematics, computer science, software engineering and clinical aspects of neuroimaging and brain mapping. Dr. Thompson obtained his M.A. in Mathematics and Classical Languages from Oxford University, England, and his Ph.D. in Neuroscience from UCLA. Dr. Thompson's team of 15 researchers includes students in neuroscience, biomedical engineering, and biomedical physics. Recent awards include the Fulbright and Hughes Fellowships (1993-1998), the Turken Award for Alzheimer's Disease research (2003), and six active NIH grants that support neuroimaging research. Collaborating with 40 imaging labs around the world, Dr. Thompson and his students have published over 200 articles describing novel mathematical and computational strategies for analyzing brain image databases, for detecting pathology in individual patients and groups, and for creating disease-specific atlases of the human brain. Recent work has discovered new structural and functional brain changes during brain development and degeneration, Alzheimer's Disease and other dementias, schizophrenia and bipolar illness, HIV/AIDS, methamphetamine abuse, and autism. We also study the genetic brain disorders of Fragile X syndrome, VCFS, and Williams syndrome. For many of these illnesses, we are creating population-based digital brain atlases. New computational tools, developed in the lab, are used to map how these diseases spread in the living brain, and in drug trials and basic research studies. We also have very active projects on diffusion tensor imaging of twins (to map gene effects on the brain), as well as high-field brain imaging, and medical image analysis. In more clinically-oriented projects, imaging approaches are tracking therapeutic response to antipsychotic drugs in schizophrenia, and medication effects in dementia. These collaborative projects combine the talents of students and postdoctoral researchers in neuroscience, engineering, mathematics, and clinical neurology. Lab home page: http://www.loni.ucla.edu/~thompson/thompson.html

Publications:
http://www.loni.ucla.edu/~thompson/thompson_pubs.html. All publications can be found this URL.. ; .


UCLA Health Sciences UCLA Terms & Conditions Privacy Practices Disability Resources © UC Regents