XNAT

People

Daniel Marcus, Ph.D.

Dan directs the Neuroinformatics Research Group at Washington University. His informatics interests include data sharing, data mining, and visual representations of brain measures. His scientific interests include neural coding and connectivity, brain morphometry, and genetics of cognitive and neurological phenotypes. Dan spends his free time enjoying life with his wife and daughter and managing the Dogtown Inferno, his perennial loser fantasy baseball franchise.

Randy Buckner, Ph.D.

Randy is Professor of Psychology at Harvard University and Investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. He is also faculty of the Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging. His research applies neuroimaging techniques to explore brain areas involved in human memory. Randy has also recently become interested in how information about the healthy brain can help to guide our understanding of damaged and diseased brain states such as occur after a stroke or during the progression of Dementia of the Alzheimer Type (DAT).

Timothy Olsen

Tim completed Bachelor's degrees in Philosophy and Political Science at the University of Illinois in Champaign/Urbana, IL and a Master's degree in Computer Science from Illinois State University. He is currently the lead developer of XNAT. Tim is feverishly renovating his new house under the watchful eyes of his ever expanding family

Mohana Ramaratnam

Mohana completed her Masters in Mathematics from University of Pune, India. She is currently the lead developer of XNAT's web-based image viewer. Mohana cooks a mean curried chicken and is the proud mother of Tanuj.

Kevin Archie, Ph.D.

Kevin received a Ph.D. in computational neuroscience from the University of Southern California (Go Trojans!) and a B.S. in computer science from CalTech (Go... uh...Beavers!). He recently completed a postdoc in the laboratory of Ralf Wessel in the Physics Dept. at Washington University. Kevin heads up the DICOM efforts for the XNAT group.

Our collaborators

Talented programmers and scientists at institutions across the country contribute to the XNAT effort. Our collaborators include Johns Hopkins University, Duke University, UC San Diego, Janelia Farms, NIMH, NCCBI, and the University of Kansas. We hope you'll join the list.