170 papers found
Refreshing results…
I see what you mean: Theta power increases are involved in the retrieval of lexical semantic information
Imaging the human motor system's beta-band synchronization during isometric contraction.
Motor-cortical beta oscillations are modulated by correctness of observed action
Early decreases in alpha and gamma band power distinguish linguistic from visual information during spoken sentence comprehension
Visual areas become less engaged in associative recall following memory stabilization.
Evidence for fast, low level motor resonance to action observation: An MEG study
Frontal theta EEG activity correlates negatively with the default mode network in resting state
Population activity in the human dorsal pathway predicts the accuracy of visual motion detection
Nonparametric statistical testing of EEG- and MEG-data
Modulation of Neuronal Interactions Through Neuronal Synchronization.
Parieto-occipital sources account for the increase in alpha activity with working memory load
LTP-like changes induced by paired associative stimulation of the primary somatosensory cortex in humans : source analysis and associated changes in behaviour
Oscillatory Activity in Human Parietal and Occipital Cortex Shows Hemispheric Lateralization and Memory Effects in a Delayed Double-Step Saccade Task
High-frequency activity in human visual cortex is modulated by visual motion strength
Tactile spatial attention enhances gamma-band activity in somatosensory cortex and reduces low-frequency activity in parieto-occipital areas
Successful declarative memory formation is associated with ongoing activity during encoding in a distributed neocortical network related to working memory: A magnetoencephalography study
Neurophysiology of implicit timing in serial choice reaction-time performance
Investigating neurophysiological correlates of metacontrast masking with magnetoencephalography
Cortical responses to contextual influences in amodal completion
Theta and gamma oscillations predict encoding and retrieval of declarative memory
Missing publications? Read more about our data sources.