Source localization techniques for intracranial EEG
Practical session: ABCs of gamma mappingĥ. Practical sessions: ABCs of cortico-cortical evoked potentials CCEPs and averagingĤ. Practical sessions: ABCs of high frequency oscillationsģ. Basics of signal processing and filtersĢ. Workshop on EEG and ECoG signal processingġ. Intraoperative electrocorticography and anesthetic considerations Other uses of electrical cortical stimulationīasics of Clinical Electrocorticography ECoGĢ. Cingulate/insular/parietal/temporal mapping by ECSġ3. Mapping in Children: Methodological considerationsġ1. Temporal summation and refractory periodsĨ. Brief history of electrical cortical stimulationģ. Mentoring in research and manuscript writingįunctional Mapping by Electrical Cortical Stimulation (ECS)ġ. Clinical Observership in mapping and intracranial EEG iv. Workshops on EEG and image processing iii. Course on theoretical aspects of electrical cortical stimulation and electrocorticography ii. The Human Brain Mapping Program at the University of Pittsburgh Comprehensive Epilepsy Center offers a 1- year fellowship that involves i. Location: 3471 Fifth avenue | LKB 8th floor - Suite 815 | Pittbsurgh, PA 15213 | Time: 12-1pm The lectures will take place on Fridays, and are held biweekly.
#HUMAN BRAIN MAPPING JOB SERIES#
The series will emphasize training on electrophysiology neuroimaging fundamentals, applications of specific techniques to relevant disorders of the nervous system. The goal of this course is to make these outstanding resources available and encourage their use in clinical neuroscience disease-oriented research. The University of Pittsburgh Medical Center has world-class electrophysiology and neuroimaging infrastructure and facilities and leaders in many of these fields. In the last few decades there has been an enormous growth in neuroimaging and electrophysiology techniques for human brain mapping ranging from high resolution and frequency digitized EEG, electrical stimulation, neuromodulation, volumetric and functional MRI to many other modalities such as MR Spectroscopy, PET and EEG. This course is open to everyone, is not credited, and does not require registration. The course has been held at UPMC since 2019, and at Yale 2013-2018 and had attracted local students, international scholars, neurology/neurosurgery faculty and post-doc in multiple subdomains.
We are delighted to announce that our course series entitled “Human Brain Mapping” organized through the Human Brain Mapping Laboratory at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center will take place as planned this academic year Jul 21 - Jun 22.