Adam M. Wright
Neuroscience · Indiana University
Publications
24
Citations
278
Est. group size
~1
Recurring co-author estimate
Active years
13
Publishing since 2014
Adam M. Wright works in neuroscience with a focus on advanced magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) methods. His research develops imaging techniques to study physiological processes in the body and brain, including tools to measure blood-oxygen changes and time delays in dynamic scans. A notable strand of his work applies MRI to assess placental function during pregnancy and to predict adverse pregnancy outcomes.
Publication activity has grown noticeably in recent years, rising from a few papers per year around 2020 to a peak of eight in 2025.
Generated by claude-opus-4-8 from public bibliographic data · Jul 11, 2026
- <scp>TRACC</scp> ‐ <scp>PHYSIO</scp> : Time‐Domain Resolution‐Aligned Cross‐Correlation to Estimate <scp>PHYSIOlogical</scp> Coupling and Time Delays in Dynamic <scp>MRI</scp>
Magnetic Resonance in Medicine · 2026
- Quantitative longitudinal T2* mapping for assessing placental function and association with adverse pregnancy outcomes across gestation
PLoS ONE · 2022
- Assessing placental function across gestation: a multi-institutional study of BOLD-MRI for the prediction of adverse pregnancy outcomes
Research Square · 2021
- Urinary CD80 Discriminates Among Glomerular Disease Types and Reflects Disease Activity
Kidney International Reports · 2020
- Micro-anatomic alterations of the placenta in a non-human primate model of gestational protein-restriction
PLoS ONE · 2020
- Correction: Micro-anatomic alterations of the placenta in a non-human primate model of gestational protein-restriction
PLoS ONE · 2020
- Proceedings on CD-ROM - International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine. Scientific Meeting and Exhibition/Proceedings of the International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine, Scientific Meeting and Exhibition×4
- PLoS ONE×3
- NMR in Biomedicine×2
- Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow & Metabolism×2
- NeuroImage×2
This profile was generated automatically from public scholarly data (OpenAlex). Group size and activity levels are estimates derived from co-authorship patterns.
Last updated Jul 11, 2026.
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