Core Metrics
Total Citations
2,672
H-Index
16
Publications
23
i10-Index
16
2-Year Citedness
0.0
avg citations per work
Ability Dimensions
2,672 citations, h=16
Based on publication trend
23 papers (1.9/year)
116 cites/paper
3 unique research topics
5 topic areas
Top 3 papers: 60% of citations
* Percentile scores are calculated relative to all scholars in the computational neuroscience dataset. Tags are assigned based on dimension combinations. Hover over the radar chart for details.
Scholar Profile Analysis
Archy O. de Berker is a emerging scholar in computational neuroscience, currently affiliated with Independent Research.
Over a 12-year academic career, published 23 papers (averaging 1.9 per year), with 2,672 citations.
Outstanding early career performance: first 5 years account for 42.5% of total citations (1,136), showing strong early impact.
Primary research areas include Dissociation (chemistry), Dissociation (chemistry), Intraclass correlation.
Key Findings
Signature Work
"A deep learning framework for neuroscience" is the most influential work, with 1,018 citations, published in 2019.
Consistent Output
Averaging 116 citations per paper, maintaining steady high-quality output.
Early Career Analysis (First 5 Years)
Career Start
2013 - 2017
Early Citations
1,136
Early Works
13
Early Impact %
42.5%
Top Early Career Paper
Computations of uncertainty mediate acute stress responses in humans
Publication Timeline
Research Topics
Top Publications
A deep learning framework for neuroscience
1,018
Citations
Computations of uncertainty mediate acute stress responses in humans
348
Citations
Understanding the behavioural consequences of noninvasive brain stimulation
245
Citations
Triple dissociation of attention and decision computations across prefrontal cortex
224
Citations
Pharmacological Fingerprints of Contextual Uncertainty
157
Citations
Predicting the behavioral impact of transcranial direct current stimulation: issues and limitations
127
Citations
Cortical beta oscillations are associated with motor performance following visuomotor learning
93
Citations
Movement-related beta oscillations show high intra-individual reliability
88
Citations
Action boosts episodic memory encoding in humans via engagement of a noradrenergic system
82
Citations
Response repetition biases in human perceptual decisions are explained by activity decay in competitive attractor models
56
Citations