AIMS
The AIMS research group at Vrije Universiteit Brussel is a young interdisciplinary research group on the intersection between clinical, medical and engineering sciences. AIMS aim is to leverage developments in artificial intelligence into an improved clinical practice and health.
Events
- Practical info-
AIMS Launch
The official launch of AIMS will be organised through a teleconference for which you should have received the link!
- Practical info-
Scientific evening - National MS Centre Melsbroek
Due to the COVID crisis, this event is organised through MS Teams.
- Practical info
KAGB Online AI symposium
At the Royal Academy of Medicine in Belgium prof Guy Nagels presented on AI in biomedical education (in Dutch).
Recent news
ECTRiMS-2023
AIMS will be present at ECTRIMS-2023 in Milan! Stijn Denissen will present "Federated learning for brain image decoding in MS" Chiara Rossi will present "The task-evoked network dynamics underlying working memory in RR-MS: a magnetoencephalography study" Delphine Van Laethem will...New paper by Lars Costers
Lars Costers and colleagues previously analysed the n-Back paradigm in healthy subjects (find the paper here) and now continued their work to include a comparison with people with multiple sclerosis (full paper can be found here).New paper by Johan Baijot
Johan Baijot and colleagues published their findings on graph-theoretical analysis in Scientific Reports. Main take-home message is to be careful when performing graph-theoretical analyses on functional MR imaging data. Find the full open-access publication here.
Blog
How do we compare cognitive performance?
I guess we've all been there; once again I've totally forgotten what I was actually searching for, after having been determined to find my pen on my desk.
[VIDEO] Impact of cognitive dysfunction on locomotor rehabilitation potential in MS
Do you want to know more about how cognitive functioning might impact the capacity of persons with Mutiple Sclerosis to augment their ambulatory function during an intensive rehabilitation stay at the National Multiple Sclerosis Center of Melsbroek?
Understanding how Multiple Sclerosis affects the brain: Our latest research
Living with Multiple Sclerosis (MS) can be tough, especially when trying to understand how the disease impacts your brain. Our research group has been working hard to shed light on these changes and what they mean for those living with MS.
What we did