Phivos Phylactou

@phivph
10 Followers
63 Following
16 Posts
I make people play boring video games and then zap their brains with magnetic pulses to understand how memory works.

@kirstinfheise thank you! Do you mean prefer brown or pink over white?
I was also thinking about TAAC for masking:

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0165027022000188

Hey #EEG #neuroscience folks.

Looking for earbuds/headphones/headsets recommendations for EEG-TMS stuff (play white noise during recording).

Will active noise cancellation contaminate the signal?

I see some recent TMS studies relying on phosphenes and discussing that (as expected) not all participants report reliable phosphenes. Just wanted to remind you that we’ve estimated this to help you out. One in four folk will fail to perceive phosphenes.

https://www.brainstimjrnl.com/article/S1935-861X(22)00260-1/fulltext

Our findings support the idea of MT as a global excitability measure, which is important for designing both applied and basic TMS and rTMS studies. For a detailed discussion of our findings, remaining questions, and future directions, make sure to check out our preprint.
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Also, with a subset of our data, we found that PT intensities are higher than MT.
This correlation remained robust in all subsequent exploratory analyses. The exploratory analyses showed that different parameters (such as single vs paired pulse for PT, and 50 vs. 100 μV for MT), affect the linear relationship.
A few studies have tried to clarify whether PT and MT are correlated, though they provided contradictory findings. We gathered them all, and conducted a meta-correlation revealing that the two are correlated (ρ = 0.4).
Whether MT serves as a global measure remains questionable. One way to investigate this, is to test its relationship with another TMS measure of excitability, the phosphene threshold (PT).
In TMS, we often measure cortical excitability through the motor threshold (MT) and we rely on this estimate even when we stimulate outside the motor cortex. Though, this rests on the assumption that MT serves as a 'global' measure of excitability.

Our latest work now on @biorxiv_neursci

Through meta-analysis we show that TMS phosphene & motor thresholds are correlated.

Read the preprint for details, or continue reading this thread for more. @daspainbrain

https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2023.12.12.571304v1