All Stories

  1. Inter-brain functional connectivity: Are we measuring the right thing?
  2. Kohti konvergenssitutkimusta
  3. Somatotopic disruption of the functional connectivity of the primary sensorimotor cortex in complex regional pain syndrome type 1
  4. Introduction
  5. Artifacts
  6. Brain Rhythms
  7. Motor Function
  8. Brain Disorders
  9. Auditory Responses
  10. Visual Responses
  11. Somatosensory Responses
  12. The Social Brain
  13. Analyzing the Data
  14. Practicalities of Data Collection
  15. MEG - EEG Primer
  16. Bodily feelings and aesthetic experience of art
  17. When crafts and science meet
  18. Brain activity reflects the predictability of word sequences in listened continuous speech
  19. Imaging Real-Time Tactile Interaction With Two-Person Dual-Coil fMRI
  20. Brain and behavioral alterations in subjects with social anxiety dominated by empathic embarrassment
  21. Electrophysiological evidence for limited progression of the proprioceptive impairment in Friedreich ataxia
  22. Emotions amplify speaker–listener neural alignment
  23. Evidence for genetically determined degeneration of proprioceptive tracts in Friedreich ataxia
  24. Bodily maps of emotions are culturally universal.
  25. Cross-cultural similarity in relationship-specific social touching
  26. Cortical Tracking of Speech-in-Noise Develops from Childhood to Adulthood
  27. Opioidergic Regulation of Emotional Arousal: A Combined PET–fMRI Study
  28. Aberrant Cortical Integration in First-Episode Psychosis During Natural Audiovisual Processing
  29. Reply to “Clinical practice guidelines or clinical research guidelines?”
  30. Maps of subjective feelings
  31. IFCN-endorsed practical guidelines for clinical magnetoencephalography (MEG)
  32. Consistency and similarity of MEG- and fMRI-signal time courses during movie viewing
  33. Brain-to-brain hyperclassification reveals action-specific motor mapping of observed actions in humans
  34. Magnetoencephalography
  35. MEG Insight into the Spectral Dynamics Underlying Steady Isometric Muscle Contraction
  36. From Brain–Environment Connections to Temporal Dynamics and Social Interaction: Principles of Human Brain Function
  37. Dissociable Roles of Cerebral μ-Opioid and Type 2 Dopamine Receptors in Vicarious Pain: A Combined PET–fMRI Study
  38. Social Laughter Triggers Endogenous Opioid Release in Humans
  39. Complex regional pain syndrome: The matter of white matter?
  40. Corticokinematic coherence as a new marker for somatosensory afference in newborns
  41. Functional brain segmentation using inter‐subject correlation in fMRI
  42. Artifacts
  43. Data Acquisition and Preprocessing
  44. Introduction
  45. Somatosensory Responses
  46. Brain Disorders
  47. Basic Physics and Physiology of MEG and EEG
  48. Brain Rhythms
  49. Motor Function
  50. Visual Responses
  51. Auditory Responses
  52. The Social Brain
  53. Analyzing the Data
  54. Looking to the Future
  55. Practicalities of Data Collection
  56. Instrumentation for MEG and EEG
  57. Insights into the Human Brain
  58. Evoked and Event-Related Responses
  59. Brain Signals Related to Change Detection
  60. An Overview of EEG and MEG
  61. Other Sensory Responses and Multisensory Interactions
  62. Abnormal Brain Responses to Action Observation in Complex Regional Pain Syndrome
  63. Sequentiality, Mutual Visibility, and Behavioral Matching: Body Sway and Pitch Register During Joint Decision Making
  64. Contextual and social cues may dominate natural visual search
  65. Effect of interstimulus interval on cortical proprioceptive responses to passive finger movements
  66. Precuneus functioning differentiates first-episode psychosis patients during the fantasy movie Alice in Wonderland
  67. Haptic contents of a movie dynamically engage the spectator's sensorimotor cortex
  68. Social touch modulates endogenous μ-opioid system activity in humans
  69. Attending to and neglecting people: bridging neuroscience, psychology and sociology
  70. Behavioural activation system sensitivity is associated with cerebral μ-opioid receptor availability
  71. Bodily maps of emotions across child development
  72. Left Superior Temporal Gyrus Is Coupled to Attended Speech in a Cocktail-Party Auditory Scene
  73. Sensorimotor activation related to speaker vs. listener role during natural conversation
  74. Reliable recording and analysis of MEG-based corticokinematic coherence in the presence of strong magnetic artifacts
  75. Neural signatures of hand kinematics in leaders vs. followers: A dual-MEG study
  76. Spatial variability in cortex-muscle coherence investigated with magnetoencephalography and high-density surface electromyography
  77. Topography of social touching depends on emotional bonds between humans
  78. Centrality of Social Interaction in Human Brain Function
  79. Cortical kinematic processing of executed and observed goal-directed hand actions
  80. Phasic stabilization of motor output after auditory and visual distractors
  81. Enlargement of choroid plexus in complex regional pain syndrome
  82. P.1.i.035 Differentiation between first-episode psychosis patients and healthy subjects on the basis of precuneus activation
  83. Brain responds to another person's eye blinks in a natural setting-the more empathetic the viewer the stronger the responses
  84. Modulation of Rolandic Beta-Band Oscillations during Motor Simulation of Joint Actions
  85. An Internet-Based Real-Time Audiovisual Link for Dual MEG Recordings
  86. Word-by-word entrainment of speech rhythm during joint story building
  87. Adult attachment style is associated with cerebral μ-opioid receptor availability in humans
  88. Stimulus-Rate Sensitivity Discerns Area 3b of the Human Primary Somatosensory Cortex
  89. MEG-compatible pneumatic stimulator to elicit passive finger and toe movements
  90. Towards brain-activity-controlled information retrieval: Decoding image relevance from MEG signals
  91. Discrete Neural Signatures of Basic Emotions
  92. The brain timewise: how timing shapes and supports brain function
  93. Patients with complex regional pain syndrome overestimate applied force in observed hand actions
  94. Corticokinematic coherence mainly reflects movement-induced proprioceptive feedback
  95. Emotional speech synchronizes brains across listeners and engages large-scale dynamic brain networks
  96. Synchronous brain activity across individuals underlies shared psychological perspectives
  97. Human Neuromagnetic Steady-State Responses to Amplitude-Modulated Tones, Speech, and Music
  98. Spatial variability of functional brain networks in early-blind and sighted subjects
  99. Neuromagnetic brain responses to other person's eye blinks seen on video
  100. Intersubject consistency of cortical MEG signals during movie viewing
  101. Human primary motor cortex is both activated and stabilized during observation of other person's phasic motor actions
  102. All that glitters is not BOLD: inconsistencies in functional MRI
  103. Functional parcellation of the human primary somatosensory cortex to natural touch
  104. Mental Action Simulation Synchronizes Action–Observation Circuits across Individuals
  105. Bodily maps of emotions
  106. Decoding magnetoencephalographic rhythmic activity using spectrospatial information
  107. The Opponent Matters: Elevated fMRI Reward Responses to Winning Against a Human Versus a Computer Opponent During Interactive Video Game Playing
  108. Activation of Auditory Cortex by Anticipating and Hearing Emotional Sounds: An MEG Study
  109. Influence of Turn-Taking in a Two-Person Conversation on the Gaze of a Viewer
  110. Listening to an Audio Drama Activates Two Processing Networks, One for All Sounds, Another Exclusively for Speech
  111. Coherence between magnetoencephalography and hand-action-related acceleration, force, pressure, and electromyogram
  112. Corticokinematic coherence during active and passive finger movements
  113. Feature-Specific Information Processing Precedes Concerted Activation in Human Visual Cortex
  114. Synchrony of brains and bodies during implicit interpersonal interaction
  115. Primary motor cortex and cerebellum are coupled with the kinematics of observed hand movements
  116. Just watching the game ain't enough: striatal fMRI reward responses to successes and failures in a video game during active and vicarious playing
  117. Non-linear canonical correlation for joint analysis of MEG signals from two subjects
  118. Is it just a brick wall or a sign from the universe? An fMRI study of supernatural believers and skeptics
  119. Binaural interaction and the octave illusion
  120. Association of poor insight in schizophrenia with structure and function of cortical midline structures and frontopolar cortex
  121. Functional Subdivision of Group-ICA Results of fMRI Data Collected during Cinema Viewing
  122. Dog Experts' Brains Distinguish Socially Relevant Body Postures Similarly in Dogs and Humans
  123. Magnetoencephalography: From SQUIDs to neuroscience
  124. Emotions promote social interaction by synchronizing brain activity across individuals
  125. Identifying fragments of natural speech from the listener's MEG signals
  126. Pre- and post-operative diffusion tensor imaging of the median nerve in carpal tunnel syndrome
  127. HumanROBO1Regulates Interaural Interaction in Auditory Pathways
  128. The pace of prosodic phrasing couples the listener's cortex to the reader's voice
  129. Naturalistic fMRI Mapping Reveals Superior Temporal Sulcus as the Hub for the Distributed Brain Network for Social Perception
  130. MEG dual scanning: a procedure to study real-time auditory interaction between two persons
  131. Evaluation of voxel-based group-level analysis of diffusion tensor images using simulated brain lesions
  132. Data-based functional template for sorting independent components of fMRI activity
  133. Characterization of neuromagnetic brain rhythms over time scales of minutes using spatial independent component analysis
  134. What differs in visual recognition of handwritten vs. printed letters? An fMRI study
  135. Engagement of amygdala in third‐person view of face‐to‐face interaction
  136. Functional motor-cortex mapping using corticokinematic coherence
  137. Embodied visual perception of distorted finger postures
  138. Experiencing Art: The Influence of Expertise and Painting Abstraction Level
  139. Observing touch activates human primary somatosensory cortex
  140. Aberrant temporal and spatial brain activity during rest in patients with chronic pain
  141. The brain in time: insights from neuromagnetic recordings
  142. Lipreading and Covert Speech Production Similarly Modulate Human Auditory-Cortex Responses to Pure Tones
  143. Gaze-direction-based MEG averaging during audiovisual speech perception
  144. Characterization of Spontaneous Neuromagnetic Brain Rhythms Using Independent Component Analysis of Short-Time Fourier Transforms
  145. Functional Motor Mapping Using Corticokinetic Coherence
  146. Independent component analysis of short-time Fourier transforms for spontaneous EEG/MEG analysis
  147. Cortical Responses to A -Fiber Stimulation: Magnetoencephalographic Recordings in a Subject Lacking Large Myelinated Afferents
  148. Oscillatory response function: Towards a parametric model of rhythmic brain activity
  149. Attenuation of Somatosensory Responses to Self-Produced Tactile Stimulation
  150. Transient Suppression of Ipsilateral Primary Somatosensory Cortex during Tactile Finger Stimulation
  151. Neuromagnetic responses to vowels vs. tones reveal hemispheric lateralization
  152. Viewing speech modulates activity in the left SI mouth cortex
  153. EU science funding milestones miss the mark
  154. Cortical activation during a spatiotemporal tactile comparison task
  155. Hands help hearing: Facilitatory audiotactile interaction at low sound-intensity levels
  156. Comparison of BOLD fMRI and MEG characteristics to vibrotactile stimulation
  157. Enhanced Extrastriate Activation during Observation of Distorted Finger Postures
  158. Auditory Cortical Responses to Speech-Like Stimuli in Dyslexic Adults
  159. Relation Between Frontal 3–7 Hz MEG Activity and the Efficacy of ECT in Major Depression
  160. Cortico‐muscular synchronization during isometric muscle contraction in humans as revealed by magnetoencephalography
  161. Left-hemisphere dominance for processing of vowels
  162. Subject's own speech reduces reactivity of the human auditory cortex
  163. Task‐dependent modulation of 15‐30 Hz coherence between rectified EMGs from human hand and forearm muscles
  164. Where the abstract feature maps of the brain might come from
  165. Modification of neuromagnetic cortical signals by thalamic infarctions
  166. Activation of the human occipital and parietal cortex by pattern and luminance stimuli: neuromagnetic measurements
  167. Responsiveness of Human Cortical Activity to Rhythmical Stimulation: A Three-Modality, Whole-Cortex Neuromagnetic Investigation
  168. Neuromagnetic sequelae of herpes simplex encephalitis
  169. Involvement of Primary Motor Cortex in Motor Imagery: A Neuromagnetic Study
  170. Magnetoencephalographic cortical rhythms
  171. Modulation of Human Cortical Rolandic Rhythms during Natural Sensorimotor Tasks
  172. Face-specific responses from the human inferior occipito-temporal cortex
  173. Characteristics of auditory sensory memory: Neuromagnetic evidence
  174. Distinct cortical activations to luminance and pattern stimuli-1Z
  175. Evidence for reactive magnetic 10-Hz rhythm in the human auditory cortex
  176. Evidence for reactive magnetic 10-Hz rhythm in the human auditory cortex
  177. Human cortical oscillations: a neuromagnetic view through the skull
  178. Movement-related slow cortical magnetic fields and changes of spontaneous MEG- and EEG-brain rhythms
  179. Information processing in the human brain: magnetoencephalographic approach.
  180. Human cortical 40 Hz rhythm is closely related to EMG rhythmicity
  181. Temporal integration in auditory sensory memory: neuromagnetic evidence
  182. Deviant Auditory Stimuli Activate Human Left and Right Auditory Cortex Differently
  183. Odorants activate the human superior temporal sulcus
  184. Preference of Personal to Extrapersonal Space in a Visuomotor Task
  185. Bilateral activation of the human somatomotor cortex by distal hand movements
  186. Tactile information from the human hand reaches the ipsilateral primary somatosensory cortex
  187. Human auditory cortical mechanisms of sound lateralisation: III. Monaural and binaural shift responses
  188. Comparison of somatosensory evoked fields to airpuff and electric stimuli
  189. Characterization of spontaneous MEG rhythms in healthy adults
  190. Activation of the human posterior parietal cortex by median nerve stimulation
  191. Spatiotemporal characteristics of sensorimotor neuromagnetic rhythms related to thumb movement
  192. Dynamics of brain activation during picture naming
  193. Use of a computerized brain atlas in magnetoencephalographic activation studies
  194. Visual stability during eyeblinks
  195. Responses of the human auditory cortex to changes in one versus two stimulus features
  196. Parietal epileptic mirror focus detected with a whole-head neuromagnetometer
  197. Phonetic invariance in the human auditory cortex
  198. Determinants of the auditory mismatch response
  199. Suppression of magnetic μ rhythm during parkinsonian tremor
  200. Functional Organization of the Human First and Second Somatosensory Cortices: a Neuromagnetic Study
  201. Human auditory cortical mechanisms of sound lateralization: I. Interaural time differences within sound
  202. Human auditory cortical mechanisms of sound lateralization: II. Interaural time differences at sound onset
  203. Magnetoencephalography—theory, instrumentation, and applications to noninvasive studies of the working human brain
  204. The Human Auditory Sensory Memory Trace Persists about 10 sec: Neuromagnetic Evidence
  205. Magnetoencephalographic localization of epileptic cortex—impact on surgical treatment
  206. Neuromagnetic mismatch fields to single and paired tones
  207. Auditory attention affects two different areas in the human supratemporal cortex
  208. Magnetoencephalographic 10-Hz rhythm from the human auditory cortex
  209. MEG versus EEG localization test
  210. Seeing speech: visual information from lip movements modifies activity in the human auditory cortex
  211. Brain activity associated with skilled finger movements: Multichannel magnetic recordings
  212. Seeing faces activates three separate areas outside the occipital visual cortex in man
  213. Separate finger representations at the human second somatosensory cortex
  214. Neuromagnetic steady-state responses to auditory stimuli
  215. Reactions of human auditory cortex to a change in tone duration
  216. Cerebral neuromagnetic responses evoked by short auditory stimuli
  217. Responses of the primary auditory cortex to pitch changes in a sequence of tone pips: Neuromagnetic recordings in man
  218. Auditory evoked transient and sustained potentials in the human EEG: I. Effects of expectation of stimuli
  219. Auditory evoked transient and sustained potentials in the human EGG: II. Effects of small doses of ethanol
  220. Effect of stimulus repetition on negative sustained potentials elicited by auditory and visual stimuli in the human EEG