Contact information
Luke Baxter
Postdoctoral Research Associate
Luke is currently a PhD student studying neonatal pain in Prof Rebeccah Slater’s lab. He is interested in the unique challenges faced during infant MRI, such as differences in brain structure and physiology and large degree of subject motion compared to healthy adults. He has focused on optimising preprocessing and analysis methods tailored to this age group. Luke is also interested in understanding the sources of individual variability in response to noxious stimuli, with a focus on spontaneous brain activity. Specifically, he is interested in looking at how resting-state fMRI activity relates to patterns of noxious-evoked brain activity and pain-related behaviour in newborn infants.
This research could increase our understanding of individual infant's sensitivity to pain and how this might change over time and with experience. An fMRI-derived subject-specific metric of noxious evoked activity may also be an invaluable addition in the repertoire of metrics used in infant pain research.
Luke is currently a member of St Cross College, completed his MSc in Neuroscience in 2014 at University of Oxford and his BSc in Neuroscience in 2013 at University College Cork.
Recent publications
-
Concurrent mapping of brain ontogeny and phylogeny within a common connectivity space
Warrington S. et al, (2022)
-
The impact of premature extrauterine exposure on infants' stimulus-evoked brain activity across multiple sensory systems.
Journal article
Schmidt Mellado G. et al, (2021), Neuroimage Clin, 33
-
Premature infants display discriminable behavioural, physiological and brain responses to noxious and non-noxious stimuli
Journal article
van der Vaart M. et al, (2021)
-
The impact of premature extrauterine exposure on infants’ stimulus-evoked brain activity across multiple sensory systems
Mellado GS. et al, (2021)
-
Functional and diffusion MRI reveal the neurophysiological basis of neonates’ noxious-stimulus evoked brain activity
Baxter L. et al, (2021)