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3Published 2015Table of Contents “...The fundamentals of EEG signal processing -- Event-related potentials -- Brain source localization using EEG signals -- Epilepsy detection and monitoring -- Neurological injury monitoring using QEEG -- Quantitative EEG for brain-computer interfaces -- EEG and QEEG in psychiatry -- Perspectives of M-EEG and FMRI data fusion -- Memory retention and recall process -- Neurofeedback -- Future integration of EEG-FMRI in psychiatry, psychology, and cultural neuroscience -- Future use of EEG, ERP, EEG/MEG, EEG-FMRI in treatment, prognostication, and rehabilitation of medical and surgical neurological ailments....”
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4Published 2005Table of Contents “...The emergence of electrophysiology as an aid to neurology /...”
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5Published 2018Table of Contents “...chapter I CASE STUDIES OF ACQUIRED SURFACE DYSLEXIA -- chapter I Introduction -- chapter 1 Whole-word and Analytic Translation of Spelling to Sound in a Non-semantic Reader -- chapter 2 Reading and Writing by Letter Sounds -- chapter 3 Lexicalisation and Reading Performance in Surface Dyslexia -- chapter II COMPREHENSION IN SURFACE DYSLEXIA -- chapter II Introduction -- chapter 4 Routes to Meaning in Surface Dyslexia -- chapter 5 Routes and Strategies in Surface Dyslexia and Dysgraphia -- chapter 6 Common Mechanisms in Dysnomia and Post-semantic Surface Dyslexia: Processing Deficits and Selective Attention -- chapter 7 Word Comprehension inSurface Dyslexia -- chapter III SURFACE DYSLEXIA IN VARIOUS ORTHOGRAPHIES -- chapter III Introduction -- chapter 8 Surface Dyslexia in a Language Without Irregularly Spelled Words -- chapter INTRODUCTION -- chapter CASE REPORT -- chapter GENERAL DISCUSSION -- chapter ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS -- chapter 10 Dyslexia in a DravidianLanguage -- chapter IV SURFACE DYSLEXIA AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF READING -- chapter IV Introduction -- part 11 Surface Dyslexia: Variations Within a Syndrome -- chapter AN EXPANSION OF THE REPRESENTATION OF THE PHONOLOGICAL ROUTE -- chapter CASE REPORTS -- chapter ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS -- chapter 12 On How We Read Non-Words: Data From Different Populations -- chapter 13 Beneath the Surface of Developmental Dyslexia -- chapter V MODELLING THE PRONUNCIATION OF PRINT -- chapter V Introduction -- chapter 14 From Orthography to Phonology: An Attempt at an Old Interpretation -- chapter 15 Phonological Reading: From Patterns of Impairment to Possible Procedures -- chapter 16 The -- chapter 17 Issues in the Modelling of Pronunciation Assembly in Normal Reading -- chapter VI NEUROLOGICAL APPENDIX -- chapter 18 CT Scan Correlates of Surface Dyslexia....”
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6Published 2005Table of Contents “...Sataloff -- Psychological aspects of voice disorders / Deborah Caputo Rosen ... [et al.] -- Neurologic disorders affecting the voice in performance / Robert T. ...”
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7Published 2006Table of Contents “...Benninger ... [et al.] -- The neurology of stuttering / Rebecca Spain, Steven Mandel, Robert T. ...”
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10Published 2021Table of Contents “...Mark Wiet -- Surgical management of vertigo that Is otologic in origin / R. Mark Wiet -- Neurologic origins of dizziness and vertigo / Joseph M. ...”
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11Published 2011Table of Contents “...Introduction [Basics and tinnitus] -- Different forms of tinnitus -- Hyperacusis and disorders of loudness perception -- Misophonia, phonophobia, and "exploding head" syndrome -- Epidemiology of tinnitus in adults -- Epidemiology of tinnitus in children -- Genetic risk factors in chronic tinnitus -- Anatomy and physiology of the auditory system -- Interaction between somatosensory and auditory systems -- Pathology of the auditory system that can cause tinnitus -- The role of auditory deprivation -- The role of neural plasticity in tinnitus -- Neural synchrony and neural plasticity in tinnitus -- Similarities between tinnitus and pain -- Anatomy and physiology of pain -- Behavioral animal models of tinnitus, pharmacology, and treatment -- Objective signs of tinnitus in humans -- Functional neuroimaging -- Findings from structural neuroimaging -- A global brain model of tinnitus -- A heuristic pathophysiological model of tinnitus -- Methodology of clinical trials for tinnitus -- The otolaryngologist -- The role of the audiologist in tinnitus practice -- Tinnitus from perspective of the psychologist -- The neurologist -- The psychiatrist -- The neurosurgeon -- The dentist -- The pharmacologist -- The neuroscientist -- Tinnitus from the perspective of a patient -- Introduction [Casues of tinnitus] -- Conductive and cochlear hearing loss -- Tinnitus and hearing loss -- Cochlear and non-cochlear age-related hearing loss and tinnitus -- Noise-induced hearing loss: implication for tinnitus -- Tinnitus and Mʹeni`ere's disease -- Tinnitus and vestibular schwannoma: overview and clinical correlations -- Microvascular compression of the vestibulocochlear nerve -- Causes of tinnitus: cerebrovascular diseases -- Complications to medical treatment -- Tinnitus caused and influenced by the somatosensory system -- Tinnitus and the masticatory system -- Introduction [Differential diagnosis of tinnitus] -- Algorithm for the diagnostic and therapeutic management of tinnitus -- History and questionnaires -- Clinical otologic assessment -- Audiologic clinical assessment -- Clinical otoneurological examination -- Diagnosis of tinnitus: neurological examination -- Diagnosis of somatosensory tinnitus -- Differential diagnosis of temporomandibular joint and masticatory muscle disorders in patients with tinnitus -- Psychologic/psychiatric assessment -- Introduction [Clinical characteristics of different forms of tinnitus] -- Sudden hearing loss and tinnitus -- Tinnitus and hyperacusis/phonophobia....”
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