All Stories

  1. Conceptualizing Nonconsciousness, Unconsciousness, and Subconsciousness
  2. Brain Age Change in Response to Nutraceuticals Supplementation vs. Lifestyle Modifications
  3. Nature of Selfhood in Unresponsive Patients: Neurophenomenological Perspective
  4. Quantitative Electroencephalogram (qEEG) as a Natural and Non-Invasive Window into Living Brain and Mind in the Functional Continuum of Healthy and Pathological Conditions
  5. Altered states of Selfhood
  6. Trinity of Selfhood
  7. Spatial-temporal brain-mind dynamics
  8. Brain-mind operational architectonics as a boundary between quantum physics and Eastern metaphysics
  9. Desensitization and reprocessing for PTSD from the perspective of the experiential selfhood
  10. Neuro-assessment of leadership training
  11. Syntax meets semantics during brain logical computations
  12. Pure experience of Eastern tradition and neurophysiology of Western tradition
  13. Brain space and time in mental disorders
  14. Mind the physics: Physics of mind
  15. Alterations in the Three Components of Selfhood in Persons with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder Symptoms: A Pilot qEEG Neuroimaging Study
  16. Actual Physical Potentiality for Consciousness
  17. Topodynamics of metastable brains
  18. Brain projective reality: Novel clothes for the emperor
  19. Three-dimensional components of selfhood in treatment-naive patients with major depressive disorder: A resting-state qEEG imaging study
  20. Changes in Standard Electroencephalograms Parallel Consciousness Improvements in Patients With Unresponsive Wakefulness Syndrome
  21. Information Flow in the Brain: Ordered Sequences of Metastable States
  22. Longitudinal Dynamics of 3-Dimensional Components of Selfhood After Severe Traumatic Brain Injury: A qEEG Case Study
  23. The Chief Role of Frontal Operational Module of the Brain Default Mode Network in the Potential Recovery of Consciousness from the Vegetative State: A Preliminary Comparison of Three Case Reports
  24. Long-Term (Six Years) Clinical Outcome Discrimination of Patients in the Vegetative State Could be Achieved Based on the Operational Architectonics EEG Analysis: A Pilot Feasibility Study
  25. Longitudinal assessment of clinical signs of recovery in patients with unresponsive wakefulness syndrome after traumatic or nontraumatic brain injury
  26. Trait lasting alteration of the brain default mode network in experienced meditators and the experiential selfhood
  27. Long-term meditation training induced changes in the operational synchrony of default mode network modules during a resting state
  28. Altered Structure of Dynamic Electroencephalogram Oscillatory Pattern in Major Depression
  29. EEG-guided meditation: A personalized approach
  30. 3. Long lasting coma
  31. Do we need a theory-based assessment of consciousness in the field of disorders of consciousness?
  32. Present moment, past, and future: mental kaleidoscope
  33. EEG Oscillatory States: Universality, Uniqueness and Specificity across Healthy-Normal, Altered and Pathological Brain Conditions
  34. The EEG-guided meditation and what it may offer
  35. Emerging from an unresponsive wakefulness syndrome: Brain plasticity has to cross a threshold level
  36. Consciousness as a phenomenon in the operational architectonics of brain organization: Criticality and self-organization considerations
  37. Dissociation of Vegetative and Minimally Conscious Patients Based on Brain Operational Architectonics
  38. Dissipative many-body model and a nested operational architectonics of the brain
  39. Prognostic Value of Resting-State Electroencephalography Structure in Disentangling Vegetative and Minimally Conscious States
  40. Operational Architectonics Methodology for EEG Analysis: Theory and Results
  41. The value of spontaneous EEG oscillations in distinguishing patients in vegetative and minimally conscious states
  42. DMN Operational Synchrony Relates to Self-Consciousness: Evidence from Patients in Vegetative and Minimally Conscious States
  43. Mind as a nested operational architectonics of the brain
  44. EEG oscillatory states as neuro-phenomenology of consciousness as revealed from patients in vegetative and minimally conscious states
  45. “Machine” consciousness and “artificial” thought: An operational architectonics model guided approach
  46. Toward operational architectonics of consciousness: basic evidence from patients with severe cerebral injuries
  47. Life or Death: Prognostic Value of a Resting EEG with Regards to Survival in Patients in Vegetative and Minimally Conscious States
  48. Persistent operational synchrony within brain default-mode network and self-processing operations in healthy subjects
  49. Topographic mapping of rapid transitions in EEG multiple frequencies: EEG frequency domain of operational synchrony
  50. Editorial: EEG Phenomenology and Multiple Faces of Short-term EEG Spectral Pattern
  51. Short-Term EEG Spectral Pattern as a Single Event in EEG Phenomenology
  52. Editorial: [EEG Phenomenology and Multiple Faces of Short-term EEG Spectral Pattern]
  53. Short-Term EEG Spectral Pattern as a Single Event in EEG Phenomenology~!2009-11-10~!2010-02-22~!2010-09-08~!
  54. Brain, Mind and Language Functional Architectures
  55. Mind Operational Semantics and Brain Operational Architectonics: A Putative Correspondence
  56. Brain, Mind and Language Functional Architectures
  57. Mind Operational Semantics and Brain Operational Architectonics: A Putative Correspondence
  58. Emergentist monism, biological realism, operations and brain–mind problemReply to comments on “Natural world physical, brain operational, and mind phenomenal space–time” by An.A. Fingelkurts, Al.A. Fingelkurts, C.F.H. Neves
  59. Natural world physical, brain operational, and mind phenomenal space–time
  60. Alpha rhythm operational architectonics in the continuum of normal and pathological brain states: Current state of research
  61. Morphology and dynamic repertoire of EEG short-term spectral patterns in rest: Explorative study
  62. Is our brain hardwired to produce God, or is our brain hardwired to perceive God? A systematic review on the role of the brain in mediating religious experience
  63. PHENOMENOLOGICAL ARCHITECTURE OF A MIND AND OPERATIONAL ARCHITECTONICS OF THE BRAIN: THE UNIFIED METASTABLE CONTINUUM
  64. Self-organization of Dynamic Distributed Computational Systems Applying Principles of Integrative Activity of Brain Neuronal Assemblies
  65. Methadone Restores Local and Remote Eeg Functional Connectivity in Opioid-Dependent Patients
  66. Brain and mind operational architectonics and man-made “machine” consciousness
  67. EEG oscillatory states: Temporal and spatial microstructure
  68. Brain-Mind Operational Architectonics Imaging: Technical and Methodological Aspects
  69. Reorganization of the composition of brain oscillations and their temporal characteristics during opioid withdrawal
  70. Composition of brain oscillations and their functions in the maintenance of auditory, visual and audio–visual speech percepts: an exploratory study
  71. BRAIN OPERATIONAL SPACE-TIME AND OPERATIONAL MODULES
  72. Composition of EEG oscillations and their temporal characteristics: Methadone treatment
  73. Opioid withdrawal results in an increased local and remote functional connectivity at EEG alpha and beta frequency bands
  74. Hypnosis induces a changed composition of brain oscillations in EEG: a case study
  75. Cortex functional connectivity as a neurophysiological correlate of hypnosis: An EEG case study
  76. Reorganization of the composition of brain oscillations and their temporal characteristics in opioid dependent patients
  77. Composition of brain oscillations in ongoing EEG during major depression disorder
  78. Increased local and decreased remote functional connectivity at EEG alpha and beta frequency bands in opioid-dependent patients
  79. Timing in cognition and EEG brain dynamics: discreteness versus continuity
  80. Impaired functional connectivity at EEG alpha and theta frequency bands in major depression
  81. Interictal EEG as a physiological adaptation. Part II. Topographic variability of composition of brain oscillations in interictal EEG
  82. Stability, reliability and consistency of the compositions of brain oscillations
  83. Interictal EEG as a physiological adaptation. Part I. Composition of brain oscillations in interictal EEG
  84. Nonstationary nature of the brain activity as revealed by EEG/MEG: Methodological, practical and conceptual challenges
  85. New perspectives in pharmaco-electroencephalography
  86. Functional connectivity in the brain—is it an elusive concept?
  87. The Brain's Alpha Rhythms and the Mind
  88. Local and remote functional connectivity of neocortex under the inhibition influence
  89. Enhancement of GABA-related signalling is associated with increase of functional connectivity in human cortex
  90. The interplay of lorazepam-induced brain oscillations: microstructural electromagnetic study
  91. MAKING COMPLEXITY SIMPLER: MULTIVARIABILITY AND METASTABILITY IN THE BRAIN
  92. Structural (operational) synchrony of EEG alpha activity during an auditory memory task
  93. Cortical operational synchrony during audio–visual speech integration
  94. The regularities of the discrete nature of multi-variability of EEG spectral patterns
  95. SYSTEMATIC RULES UNDERLYING SPECTRAL PATTERN VARIABILITY: EXPERIMENTAL RESULTS AND A REVIEW OF THE EVIDENCE
  96. Probability interrelations between pre-/post-stimulus intervals and ERD/ERS during a memory task
  97. 363 Probability patterns of the narrowband EEG subtraction spectra in humans during memory and storage performance
  98. 591 New technology for EEG analysis: Self-organized classification of EEG spectral patterns
  99. 342 Interhemisphere synchrony of shortterm variations in human eeg alpha power correlates with self-estimates of functional state
  100. Spatiotemporal concordance of the state-shifts among rhythms at different frequencies of EEG: operational synchrony against coherency.
  101. Topological Mapping of Sharp Reorganization Synchrony in Multichannel EEG
  102. The phenomena of time coincidence of change-point periods in different derivations of EEG
  103. Problems and solutions in EEG neuropsychopharmacology