COOKIES: By using this website you agree that we can place Google Analytics Cookies on your device for performance monitoring. |
MEG Lecture Series
Add to your list(s)
Send you e-mail reminders
Further detail
Neuroimaging is moving forward from photography, where static pictures of brain activity are being taken, to films revealing the spreading of brain activation in time and space in the millisecond range. Magnetoencephalography, or MEG , and other neurophysiological imaging techniques can provide the necessary temporal resolution. As Cambridge is in the process of acquiring a new facility for non-invasive recording of fast magnetic brain responses, there is an increasing interest in using this method in the investigation of brain and cognition. This course aims at providing a basic introduction into MEG methods and their use in the investigation of cognitive brain processes. If you have a question about this list, please contact: . If you have a question about a specific talk, click on that talk to find its organiser. 0 upcoming talks and 0 talks in the archive. Please see above for contact details for this list. |
Other listsCambridge eScience Centre Coffee with Scientists Cambridge Neurological SocietyOther talksBlack and British Migration A passion for pottery: a photographer’s dream job Changing understandings of the human fetus over five decades of legal abortion Glanville Lecture 2017/18: The Book of Exodus and the Invention of Religion Microsporidia: diverse, opportunistic and pervasive pathogens Analytical Ultracentrifugation (AUC) Single Cell Seminars (September) Towards a whole brain model of perceptual learning Knot Floer homology and algebraic methods Fumarate hydratase and renal cancer: oncometabolites and beyond Genomic Approaches to Cancer Coinage in the later medieval countryside: single-finds and the evidence from Rendlesham, Suffolk |