Benjamin Tendler
Sir Henry Wellcome Postdoctoral Fellow
I am a physicist working in the field of neuroscience. My research focuses on developing new techniques to identify processes in brain disease using Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI).
My fellowship aims to develop an imaging technique called 'steady-state diffusion' MRI. Resulting images are sensitive to the tiny motions of water within and surrounding cells, providing insights into brain structure and changes related to disease. To date, I have focused on developing these techniques in the context of post-mortem imaging. For a brief explanation of this work, please see this video.
I am an advocate for open science. I established the Digital Brain Bank, a data release platform providing access to curated, post-mortem neuroimaging datasets associated with University of Oxford researchers.
I am an advocate for research culture. I lead an initiative promoting Lab Handbooks as best practice for research groups to facilitate communication and improve how labs operate. For a brief overview of the initiative, please see this video.
More broadly, I have experience with diffusion imaging, magnetic susceptibility imaging, quantitative MRI and post-mortem investigations.
Recent publications
Multi-modal Monte Carlo MRI simulator of tissue microstructure
Journal article
Cottaar M. et al, (2026), Imaging Neuroscience
Modelling Motion-Induced Signal Corruption in Steady-State Diffusion MRI.
Journal article
Tendler BC. et al, (2026), Magn Reson Med
Between-species variation in neocortical sulcal anatomy of the carnivoran brain.
Journal article
Boch M. et al, (2026), Elife, 13
Diffusion-weighted steady-state free precession imaging in the ex vivo macaque brain on a 10.5T human MRI scanner.
Journal article
Tendler BC. et al, (2025), bioRxiv
n RF coil array system for in vivo & ex vivo non-human primate brain studies at 10.5 Tesla.
Journal article
Waks M. et al, (2025), bioRxiv
