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Fifty Years of Magnetoencephalography

Fifty Years of Magnetoencephalography

Beginnings, Technical Advances, and Applications

9780190935689
772,20 zł
694,98 zł Zniżka 77,22 zł Brutto
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Opis
Fifty Years of Magnetoencephalography celebrates the first half century of research in and clinical applications of magnetoencephalography (MEG). It catalogs and documents its evolution as a means of imaging the ongoing activity of the brain and the activation of particular neuronal networks within it that mediate sensory motor and higher functions like language. The volumes first section looks at the discovery of MEG and its first tentative applications by three of itsfounders. The following sections detail the rapid progress in the development of the instrumentation necessary for recording noninvasively the magnetic signals on the head that are associated with the brain activity; improvements in the techniques for analyzing the magnetic signals and reconstructing, on theirbasis, the functional images of brain activity; and improvements in our understanding of the nature and significance of those signals. Subsequent sections of the book detail the main clinical applications of MEG in localizing brain areas that contain sources of epileptiform activity and areas encompassing parts of functional networks essential for motor and sensory function as well as for language that have become an essential part of planning for brain surgery in many epilepsy and tumorsurgery centers around the world. In addition, several chapters describe the most current efforts aiming at expanding the utility of MEG in clinical diagnosis and theoretical research.
Szczegóły produktu
OUP USA
93330
9780190935689
9780190935689

Opis

Rok wydania
2020
Numer wydania
1
Oprawa
twarda
Liczba stron
444
Wymiary (mm)
178 x 254
Waga (g)
1111
  • PREFACE; Section One: The Beginnings; 1. THE FIRST MEG REPORT: 1968; David Cohen; Massachusetts Institute of Technology; 2. THE BEGINNING OF BIOMAGNETISM AND MEG RESEARCH IN FINLAND IN THE 1970s; Toivo Katila; Helsinki University of Technology; 3. A VIEW FROM NEAR THE BEGINNING OF MEG: AFTER HALF A CENTURY; Lloyd Kaufman; New York University; Section Two: Technical Advances; 4. PHYSIOLOGICAL BASES OF MEG AND EEG; Yoshio Okada; Boston Childrens Hospital and Harvard Medical School; 5. WHICH PART OF THE NEURONAL CURRENT CAN BE DETERMINED BY EEG?; A.S. Fokas, P Hashemzadeh and R. Leahy; University of Cambridge and University of Southern California; 6. MEG SOURCE ESTIMATION: TRANSFORMING THE SENSOR-LEVEL SIGNALS TO ESTIMATES OF BRAIN ACTIVITY; Matti S. Hämäläinen; Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School; 7. The Need for and the Road to Hybrid MEG-MRI; Risto J. Ilmoniemi; Aalto University School of Science; 8. MAGNETOENCEPHALOGRAPHY USING OPTICALLY PUMPED MAGNETOMETERS; Elena Boto, Niall Holmes, Tim Tierney, James Leggett, Ryan Hill, Stephanie Mellor, Gillian Roberts, Gareth Barnes, Richard Bowtell and Matt Brookes; University of Nottingham and the Wellcome Trust Centre for Neuroimaging, University College London; Section Three: Applications to Epilepsy; 9. GUIDELINES AND PRACTICAL CONSIDERATIONS FOR MAPPING EPILEPTIFORM ACTIVITY WITH MAGNETOENCEPHALOGRAPHY; Roozbeh Rezaie, James W. Wheless, and Abbas Babajani-Feremi.; The University of Tennessee Health Science Center; 10. BEYOND THE IRRITATIVE ZONE: USE OF MEG TO CHARACTERIZE ASPECTS OF THE EPILEPTOGENIC ZONE; Eduardo M. Castillo, Tara Kleineschay, Milena Korostenskaja , James Baumgartner and Ki Hyeong Lee; Florida Hospital for Children; 11. USE OF MULTIPLE FREQUENCY BANDS IN MEG FOR CHARACTERIZATION OF EPILEPSY; Woorim Jeong and Chun Kee Chung; Seoul National University; 12. CAN MAGNETOENCEPHALOGRAPHY IDENTIFY THE EPILEPTOGENIC PATHOLOGY IN CHILDREN?; Won Seok Chang and Hiroshi Otsubo; The Hospital for Sick Children, University of Toronto; 13. REVISIONAL ANALYSIS OF EEG AND MEG BASED ON COMPREHENSIVE EPILEPSY CONFERENCE; Nobukazu Nakasato, Akitake Kanno, Makoto Ishida, Shin-ichiro Osawa,; Masaki Iwasaki, Yosuke Kakisaka and Kazutaka Jin; Tohoku University Graduate School of Medicine; 14. EPILEPTIC SLOW WAVE ACTIVITY; Stefan Rampp and Martin Kaltenhäuser; University Hospital, Erlangen University; Section Four: Somatosensory, Motor and Language Mapping; 15. CLINICAL MOTOR MAPPING WITH MEG: HISTORICAL APPROACHES, CHALLENGES AND RECOMMENDATIONS FOR BEST PRACTICE; William Gaetz, PhD.; The Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania; Christos Papadelis, Boston Childrens Hospital, Harvard Medical School and; Tony Wilson, University of Nebraska Medical Center; 16. INVESTIGATIONS OF THE SOMATOSENSORY SYSTEM WITH MEG: FROM RESEARCH TO CLINICAL APPLICATIONS; Xavier De Ti?geand; Hopital Erasme, Universite libre de Bruxelles and; Veikko Jousmäki, Aalto University School of Science and Nanyang Technological University; 17. LANGUAGE MAPPING WITH MEG: CLINICAL AND RESEARCH APPLICATIONS; Panagiotis G. Simos; University of Crete, School of Medicine; Susan M. Bowyer; Henry Ford Hospital and Wayne State University; Kyousuke Kamada; Asahikawa Medical University; Section Five: Exploring the Brain Mechanisms of Cognition; 18. READING, READING ACQUISITION AND READING DISABILITY (DYSLEXIA) Panagiotis G. Simos; University of Crete School of Medicine; 19. MEG DECODING COGNITIVE FUNCTION WITH MEG; Dimitrios Pantazis; Massachusetts Institute of Technology; 20. HOW BRAIN RHYTHMS REFLECT COGNITIVE PROCESSES; Joachim Gross; Westphalian-Wilhelms-University of Muenster; Section Six: Neuronal Correlates of Cognitive and Affective Disorders; 21. APPLICATIONS OF MEG TO AUTISM SPECTRUM DISORDER; Kristina Safar, Margot J. Taylor,; Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto; Junko Matsuzaki and Timothy P.L. Roberts; Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia; 22. FUNCTIONAL WOUNDS OF AN INVISIBLE INJURY: VISUALIZING COGNITION IN PTSD; Benjamin T. Dunkley and Margot J. Taylor; Hospital for Sick Children, University of Toronto; 23. IDENTIFYING NEURAL ABNORMALITIES IN SCHIZOPHRENIA; J. Christopher Edgar; Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia and; Gregory A. Miller; University of California, Los Angeles; 24. BIOMARKERS IN PEDIATRIC MEG; Julia M. Stephen, Isabel Solis, John F.L. Pinner, Felicha T. Candelaria-Cook; The Mind Research Network, Lovelace Biomedical and Environmental Research Institute; and The University of New Mexico; 25. MAGNETOENCEPHALOGRAPHY IN Alzheimers disease: CORRELATION WITH CURRENT BIOMARKERS; David Lopez-Sanz; Jaisalmer de Frutos-Lucas; Gianluca Susi, and Fernando Maestú,; Complutense University of Madrid; POSTSCRIPT;
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