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Virtual Dictionary
Quantitative Electroencephalography QEEG or Quantitative Electroencephalography, is a variant of EEG in which the raw data from each electrode is never seen by the end users. Instead, all the electrode outputs are mapped into a single 3D model, showing brain activity in real-time. Below, we offer a selection of links from our resource databases which may match this term.
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News containing the Term Quantitative Electroencephalography:
Results by page [1] (22/04/2010)
Over the past five years, an increasing number of studies have pointed to the rare but serious risk of suicidal thoughts that can accompany new antidepressant treatments. Close monitoring is currently the only clinical option, but a new tec...
(09/10/2012)
For children, nighttime bedwetting is a common problem, often requiring intervention. The use of medicine and other treatments has met with limited success. Targeting neuronal activities of the brain through neurofeedback, however, has show...
(16/08/2008)
A team of UC Irvine scientists has been awarded a $4 million grant from the U.S. Army Research Office to study the neuroscientific and signal-processing foundations of "synthetic telepathy." This Brain-Machine Interface dr...
(25/03/2010)
It's the answer to every market researcher's prayer: a way to get inside the heads of consumers, literally. It addresses the biggest problem facing conventional market research, says Thom Noble, managing director of Neurofocus Europe, the...
(02/01/2005)
A survey conducted by the Stanford Institute for the Quantitative Study of Society, has discovered that internet use, for Americans at least, each hour a person spends online reduces face-to-face contact with friends, co-workers and family ...
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