Report summary
For Stanford University Department of Neurology and Neurological Sciences in 2015-2026, the graph shows 118 visible PIs and 395 internal PI collaborations. The main research signal is Medicine as the leading field (47% of slots across 97 PIs; 97 labels), Neurology as the leading subfield (14% of slots across 43 PIs; 43 labels), and Epilepsy research and treatment as the leading topic (4% of slots across 14 PIs; 14 labels). That is a healthy pattern, with enough links to reveal several interpretable groups rather than one undifferentiated component. The most prominent PIs by weighted works are Jeremy J. Heit (70 weighted works; Acute Ischemic Stroke Management, Cerebrovascular and Carotid Artery Diseases); Max Wintermark (69.2 weighted works; Acute Ischemic Stroke Management, Traumatic Brain Injury and Neurovascular Disturbances). The clearest collaboration lines are Jeremy J. Heit and Gregory W. Albers (107 shared works, weight 35); Gregory W. Albers and Maarten G. Lansberg (113 shared works, weight 30.6). The strongest breakdown groups are group 1 with 10 PIs, 12 internal connections, weight 129.8, around Epidemiology, Neurology, Rheumatology, led by Jeremy J. Heit, Max Wintermark, Gary K. Steinberg; group 2 with 10 PIs, 12 internal connections, weight 122.8, around Psychiatry and Mental health, Physiology, Molecular Biology, led by Kathleen L. Poston, Elizabeth C. Mormino, Victor W. Henderson.
