projects-c04

some default

https://github.com/sfb1451/projects-c04

Science Score: 44.0%

This score indicates how likely this project is to be science-related based on various indicators:

  • CITATION.cff file
    Found CITATION.cff file
  • codemeta.json file
    Found codemeta.json file
  • .zenodo.json file
    Found .zenodo.json file
  • DOI references
  • Academic links in README
  • Academic email domains
  • Institutional organization owner
  • JOSS paper metadata
  • Scientific vocabulary similarity
    Low similarity (0.4%) to scientific vocabulary
Last synced: 6 months ago · JSON representation ·

Repository

some default

Basic Info
  • Host: GitHub
  • Owner: sfb1451
  • Default Branch: main
  • Size: 77.1 KB
Statistics
  • Stars: 0
  • Watchers: 1
  • Forks: 0
  • Open Issues: 0
  • Releases: 0
Created over 2 years ago · Last pushed over 2 years ago
Metadata Files
Citation

Owner

  • Name: sfb1451
  • Login: sfb1451
  • Kind: organization

Citation (CITATION.cff)

abstract: Project C04 studies the molecular and functional mechanisms underlying neurodegeneration-induced
  apraxia and its counteracting reserve mechanisms based on the hypothesis that apraxic
  deficits in Alzheimer’s disease (AD) are associated with the location and extent
  of tau-pathology in praxis-related cortical networks. Characterizing apraxia in
  AD at the behavioural (neuropsychological profiling, including the Cologne apraxia
  screening, KAS), molecular (Tau-PET imaging), and functional (resting-state fMRI)
  levels will provide fundamental insights into higher motor functions and may identify
  specific factors contributing to resilience against apraxia.
authors:
- {family-names: Drzezga, given-names: Alexander}
- {family-names: Weiss-Blankenhorn, given-names: Peter}
- {family-names: Bischof, given-names: Gerard N.}
- {family-names: Latarnik, given-names: Sylvia}
- {family-names: Jäger, given-names: Elena}
cff-version: 1.2.0
message: Generated with data scraped from crc1451.uni-koeln.de
title: 'C04: Apraxia in Alzheimer’s disease: Plastic reorganization of praxis networks
  in response to chronically progressive dysfunction'

GitHub Events

Total
Last Year