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Home: Community: Researcher Profiles
Researcher Profile

RESEARCHER INFORMATION
First Name:Randy
Last Name:Buckner
Title:Associate Professor
Advanced Degrees:PhD
Affiliation:HHMI at Washington University
Department:Psychology, Radiology, and Neurobiology
Street Address 1:One Brookings Drive
Street Address 2:Campus Box 1125
City:St. Louis
State/Province:MO
Zip/Postal Code:63105
Country/Territory:U.S.A.
Phone:314 935-5019
Fax:314 935-7588
Email Address: 
Disclosure:
(view policy) 
Member reports no financial or other potential conflicts of interest. [Last Modified: 16 June 2004]
View all comments by Randy Buckner
Clinical Interests:
Aging Process
Research Focus:
Bioinformatics/Statistics, Brain imaging
Work Sector(s):
University
Web Sites:
Personal: http://iac1.wustl.edu/~cnlweb/buckner.html
Professional: http://www.hhmi.org/research/investigators/buckner.html
Lab: http://iac.wustl.edu/~cnlweb/
Researcher Bio
Dr. Buckner is Assistant Investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. He is also Associate Professor of Psychology, Radiology, and Neurobiology at Washington University. He received his B.A. degree in psychology and his M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in psychology and neuroscience from Washington University under the guidance of Steven Petersen. He trained with Bruce Rosen as a postdoctoral fellow and then Instructor of Radiology at Harvard Medical School, where he developed and applied functional MRI methods to study human memory. Dr. Buckner is currently the Director of the Cognitive Neuroscience Laboratory and the Core Director for Neuroimaging at the Washington University ADRC. He has received the Wiley Young Investigator Award from the Organization of Human Brain Mapping and the 2002 Young Investigator Award from the Cognitive Neuroscience Society.
Top Papers
Buckner, R.L., Petersen, S.E., Ojemann, J.G., Miezin, F.M., Squire, L.R., and Raichle, M.E. (1995) Functional anatomical studies of explicit and implicit memory retrieval tasks. Journal of Neuroscience, 15: 12-29.

Buckner, R.L., Bandettini, P.A., O’Craven, K.M., Savoy, R.L., Petersen, S.E., Raichle, M.E., and Rosen, B.R. (1996) Detection of cortical activation during averaged single trials of a cognitive task using functional magnetic resonance imaging. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA, 93: 14878-14883.

Wagner, A.D., Schacter, D.L., Rotte, M., Koutstaal, W., Maril, A., Dale, A.M., Rosen, B.R., and Buckner, R.L. (1998) Building memories: Remembering and forgetting of verbal experiences as predicted by brain activity. Science, 281: 1188-1191.

Buckner, R.L., Kelley W.M., Petersen, S.E. (1999) Frontal cortex contributes to human memory formation. Nature Neuroscience, 2: 311-314.

Wheeler, M.E., Petersen, S.E., and Buckner, R.L. (2000) Memory’s echo: Vivid remembering reactivates sensory-specific cortex. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA, 97: 11125-11129.

Buckner, R.L. and Wheeler, M.E. (2001) The cognitive neuroscience of remembering. Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 2: 624-634.

Logan, J.M., Sanders, A.L., Snyder, A.Z., Morris, J.C., and Buckner, R.L. (2002) Under-Recruitment and nonselective recruitment: Dissociable neural mechanisms associated with aging. Neuron, 33: 827-840.

Lustig, C., Snyder, A.Z., Bhakta, M., O’Brien, K.C., McAvoy, M., Raichle, M.E., Morris, J.C., and Buckner, R.L. (2003) Functional deactivations: Change with age and dementia of the Alzheimer type. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA , 100: 14504-14509.

Head, D., Buckner, R.L., Shimony, J.S., Williams, L.E., Akbudak, E., Conturo, T.E., Morris, J.C., and Snyder, A.Z. (2004) Differential vulnerability of anterior white matter in nondemented aging with minimal acceleration in dementia of the Alzheimer type: Evidence from Diffusion tensor imaging. Cerebral Cortex, 14: 410-423.

Lustig, C., and Buckner, R.L. (2004) Preserved neural correlates of priming in old age and dementia. Neuron, 42: 865-875.
What are the top three papers (not yours) you have read recently?
Klunk W.E. et al. (2004) Imaging brain amyloid in Alzheimer's disease with Pittsburgh Compund-B. Ann. Neurol., 44: 306-319.

Greicius M.D., Srivastava, G., Reiss, A.L., and Menon, V. (2004) Default-mode network activity distinguishes Alzheimer's disease from healthy aging: Evidence from functional MRI. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A., 101: 4637-4642.

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