Credits and Links
Credits
Image credit:
3D4Medical.com/Getty Images
Image credit:
Gandee Vasan/Stone/Getty Images
Image credit:
Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. Reproduced with permission from Neurosurgery 1998; 43(4): 877-8.
Image credit:
Jannis Productions. Rebekah Fredenburg, computer animation; Stacy Jannis, illustration/art direction.
Image credit:
Alzheimer's Disease Education and Referral Center, a service of the National Institute on Aging
Image credit:
Marcus E. Raichle, Department of Radiology, Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri.
Image credit:
Jannis Productions. Rebekah Fredenburg, computer animation; Stacy Jannis, illustration/art direction.
Image credit:
Jannis Productions. Rebekah Fredenburg, computer animation; Stacy Jannis, illustration/art direction.
Image credit:
Jannis Productions. Stacy Jannis.
Image credit:
Jannis Productions. Rebekah Fredenburg, computer animation; Stacy Jannis, illustration/art direction.
Image credit:
Jannis Productions. Rebekah Fredenburg, computer animation; Stacy Jannis, illustration/art direction.
Image credit:
Jannis Productions. Rebekah Fredenburg, computer animation; Stacy Jannis, illustration/art direction.
Image credit:
William I. Rosenblum, M.D., Professor Emeritus, Virginia Commonwealth University. The original image is part of an online "neuropathology minicourse" available at: www.pathology.vcu.edu/education/WirSelfInst/dementias.html.
Image credit:
Alzheimer's Disease Education and Referral Center, a service of the National Institute on Aging.
Image credit:
Alzheimer's Disease Education and Referral Center, a service of the National Institute on Aging.
Image credit:
Alzheimer's Disease Education and Referral Center, a service of the National Institute on Aging.
Image credit:
iStock/Leontura
Links
An extensive selection of short movies and images derived from real brains, from the Digital Anatomist Project at the University of Washington in Seattle.
Detailed information about brain structure and function, hosted by the British Broadcasting Corporation.
Information about Alzheimer's disease and the brain, hosted by the Dana Corporation, a nonprofit organization with principal interests in health, science and education.
Brain images taken with a variety of technologies from individuals with and without Alzheimer's disease or a related disorder.
Online versions of publications, newsletters and other resources provided by the National Institute on Aging (NIA).