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List of works by William Stern

A Predictable AMO-Like Pattern in the GFDL Fully Coupled Ensemble Initialization and Decadal Forecasting System

article

An Automated Statistical Technique for Counting Distinct Multiple Sclerosis Lesions

scientific article published on 22 February 2018

Association Between Thoracic Spinal Cord Gray Matter Atrophy and Disability in Multiple Sclerosis.

scientific article published on 8 June 2015

GFDL's CM2 Global Coupled Climate Models. Part I: Formulation and Simulation Characteristics

article

Improved Seasonal Prediction of Temperature and Precipitation over Land in a High-Resolution GFDL Climate Model

article

Long-term evolution of multiple sclerosis disability in the treatment era.

scientific article published on 27 July 2016

Measurement of spinal cord atrophy using phase sensitive inversion recovery (PSIR) imaging in motor neuron disease

scientific article published in PLoS ONE

Neurite Orientation Dispersion and Density Imaging for Assessing Acute Inflammation and Lesion Evolution in MS

scientific article published on 05 November 2020

Power estimation for non-standardized multisite studies

scientific article

Seasonal Predictability of Extratropical Storm Tracks in GFDL’s High-Resolution Climate Prediction Model

article

Silent progression in disease activity-free relapsing multiple sclerosis

scientific article published on 30 March 2019

Spinal cord gray matter atrophy correlates with multiple sclerosis disability

scientific article published on 21 August 2014

Telomere Length Is Associated with Disability Progression in Multiple Sclerosis

scientific article published on 02 October 2019

The Dynamical Core, Physical Parameterizations, and Basic Simulation Characteristics of the Atmospheric Component AM3 of the GFDL Global Coupled Model CM3

article

The Roles of Radiative Forcing, Sea Surface Temperatures, and Atmospheric and Land Initial Conditions in U.S. Summer Warming Episodes

article

Volumetric Analysis from a Harmonized Multisite Brain MRI Study of a Single Subject with Multiple Sclerosis.

scientific article published on 22 June 2017