Trung Thanh Ngo, (PhD in Neuroscience)
Affiliations: | 2016- | Mater Research Institute-UQ, Translational Research Institute and UQ Faculty of Medicine | University of Queensland, Saint Lucia, Queensland, Australia |
Area:
precision switch medicine, phylogenetics of bistable switching (binary decision-making / choice behaviour), perceptual & autonomic neurobiology, brain disorders, device technology development, chronobiology, repeated vestibulocortical stimulation (rVCS)Website:
http://researchers.uq.edu.au/researcher/16014Google:
"https://scholar.google.com.au/citations?hl=en&user=AYE2QAQAAAAJ"Mean distance: (not calculated yet)
Parents
Sign in to add mentorJohn D. Pettigrew | grad student | 2009 | School of Biomedical Sciences and School of Psychology |
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Publications
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Ngo TT, Rentería ME, Cuéllar-Partida G. (2019) Precision switch medicine: transdiagnostic stratification of bipolar and related disorders with an integrated phenotyping and genetics analysis cloud platform Bipolar Disorders. 21: 69-69 |
Dean OM, Gliddon E, Van Rheenen TE, et al. (2018) An update on adjunctive treatment options for bipolar disorder. Bipolar Disorders |
Law PCF, Miller SM, Ngo TT. (2017) The effect of stimulus strength on binocular rivalry rate in healthy individuals: Implications for genetic, clinical and individual differences studies Physiology & Behavior. 181: 127–136 |
Law PCF, Miller SM, Ngo TT. (2017) The effect of stimulus strength on binocular rivalry rate in healthy individuals: Implications for genetic, clinical and individual differences studies. Physiology & Behavior |
Law PCF, Gurvich CT, Ngo TT, et al. (2017) Evidence that eye‐movement profiles do not explain slow binocular rivalry rate in bipolar disorder: Support for a perceptual endophenotype Bipolar Disorders. 19: 465–476 |
Law PC, Gurvich CT, Ngo TT, et al. (2017) Evidence that eye-movement profiles do not explain slow binocular rivalry rate in bipolar disorder: support for a perceptual endophenotype. Bipolar Disorders |
Ngo TT, Couvy-Duchesne B, Cuéllar-Partida G, et al. (2016) Association of psychiatric profile measures with binocular rivalry rate (BRR): Implications for slow BRR as an endophenotype for bipolar disorder Twin Research and Human Genetics. 19: 518-518 |
Law PC, Paton BK, Riddiford JA, et al. (2015) No relationship between binocular rivalry rate and eye-movement profiles in healthy individuals: A Bayes factor analysis Perception. 44: 643–661 |
Law PC, Paton BK, Riddiford JA, et al. (2015) No Relationship Between Binocular Rivalry Rate and Eye-Movement Profiles in Healthy Individuals: A Bayes Factor Analysis. Perception. 44: 643-61 |
Law PC, Paton BK, Thomson RH, et al. (2013) Dichoptic viewing methods for binocular rivalry research: prospects for large-scale clinical and genetic studies. Twin Research and Human Genetics : the Official Journal of the International Society For Twin Studies. 16: 1033-78 |