Andres Felipe Salazar-Gomez

Andres Felipe Salazar-Gomez
Massachusetts Institute of Technology | MIT · Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory

PhD

About

11
Publications
1,359
Reads
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1,026
Citations
Citations since 2017
2 Research Items
731 Citations
2017201820192020202120222023020406080100120
2017201820192020202120222023020406080100120
2017201820192020202120222023020406080100120
2017201820192020202120222023020406080100120
Additional affiliations
January 2014 - March 2017
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Position
  • Visiting Student
January 2012 - July 2013
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Position
  • Visiting Student
September 2010 - present
Boston University
Position
  • PhD Student
Education
January 2000 - December 2005
Antioquia School of Engineering - CES University
Field of study
  • Biomedical Engineering

Publications

Publications (11)
Article
Full-text available
During propofol-induced general anesthesia, alpha rhythms measured using electroencephalography undergo a striking shift from posterior to anterior, termed anteriorization, where the ubiquitous waking alpha is lost and a frontal alpha emerges. The functional significance of alpha anteriorization and the precise brain regions contributing to the phe...
Preprint
Full-text available
During propofol-induced general anesthesia, alpha rhythms undergo a striking shift from posterior to anterior, termed anteriorization. We combined human intracranial recordings with diffusion imaging to show that anteriorization occurs with opposing dynamics in two distinct thalamocortical subnetworks. The cortical and thalamic anatomy involved, as...
Article
(Background) Accurate quantitative analysis of the changes in responses to external stimuli is crucial for characterizing the timing of loss and recovery of consciousness induced by anesthetic drugs. We studied induction and emergence from unconsciousness achieved by administering a computer-controlled infusion of propofol to ten human volunteers....
Article
Full-text available
Rhythmic oscillations shape cortical dynamics during active behavior, sleep, and general anesthesia. Cross-frequency phase-amplitude coupling is a prominent feature of cortical oscillations, but its role in organizing conscious and unconscious brain states is poorly understood. Using high-density EEG and intracranial electrocorticography during gra...
Article
Full-text available
Significance Anesthesiologists reversibly manipulate the brain function of nearly 60,000 patients each day, but brain-state monitoring is not an accepted practice in anesthesia care because markers that reliably track changes in level of consciousness under general anesthesia have yet to be identified. We found specific behavioral and electrophysio...
Article
Full-text available
Accurate quantification of loss of response to external stimuli is essential for understanding the mechanisms of loss of consciousness under general anesthesia. We present a new approach for quantifying three possible outcomes that are encountered in behavioral experiments during general anesthesia: correct responses, incorrect responses and no res...
Article
Full-text available
Coherence analysis characterizes frequency-dependent covariance between signals, and is useful for multivariate oscillatory data often encountered in neuroscience. The global coherence provides a summary of coherent behavior in high-dimensional multivariate data by quantifying the concentration of variance in the first mode of an eigenvalue decompo...
Article
Full-text available
Time and frequency domain analyses of scalp EEG recordings are widely used to track changes in brain states under general anesthesia. Although these analyses have suggested that different spatial patterns are associated with changes in the state of general anesthesia, the extent to which these patterns are spatially coordinated has not been systema...
Article
Full-text available
Quantitative evaluation of respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) may provide important information in clinical practice of anesthesia and postoperative care. In this paper, we apply a point process method to assess dynamic RSA during propofol general anesthesia. Specifically, an inverse Gaussian probability distribution is used to model the heartbeat...

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