Aimee Salakhov
I work as a research assistant recruiting healthy volunteers and individuals with multiple sclerosis for MRI imaging at the Neuroimaging Outside of the Brain Lab.
I work as a research assistant recruiting healthy volunteers and individuals with multiple sclerosis for MRI imaging at the Neuroimaging Outside of the Brain Lab.
Imaging Research Scientist, VUIIS 2009 thru 2011
Current: Senior Manager, Clinical Science, Hyperfine
Research Fellow 2019 thru 2022
Current: Research Assistant Professor, Radiology & Radiological Sciences, VUMC
Instructor and Assistant Editor (CAUSE), Middle Tennessee State University 2012 thru 2014
Current: Lecturer, Middle Tennessee State University, Murfreesboro, TN
I am a physics graduate student interested in researching low-field MRI as well as MRI diffusion techniques.
I will be researching low-field MRI techniques from an experimental/computational perspective and will learn how to encode pulse sequences and construct and test RF coils.
I am interested in using diffusion imaging to reconstruct white matter pathways in the brain, particularly in the prefrontal cortex.
Currently I am working on modelling the short association fibers in the prefrontal cortex using diffusion tractography, with the goal to reconstruct short-range cortical connections that have been previously described in non-human primate histology.
Khan A, Unlu G, Lin P, et al. GeneMAP: A discovery platform for metabolic gene function. Preprint. bioRxiv. 2023;2023.12.07.570588. Published 2023 Dec 8. doi:10.1101/2023.12.07.570588
Rich A, Lin P, Gamazon E, Zinkel S. The broad impact of cell death genes on the human disease phenome. Preprint. medRxiv. 2023;2023.06.11.23291256. Published 2023 Jun 12. doi:10.1101/2023.06.11.23291256
Computational research assistant that focuses on analysis of genomics data. I am interested in applying imaging data in machine learning and integrating imaging with genomics. I am currently in the masters program to get better understanding of how medical imaging is done and it's applications in research