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Your search keyword '"Frahm, Ken Steffen"' showing total 21 results

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21 results on '"Frahm, Ken Steffen"'

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1. Investigation of directional discrimination in the nociceptive system using temperature-controlled laser stimuli.

2. Topical capsaicin modulates the two-point discrimination threshold-Modulation depends on stimulation modality and intensity.

3. Influence of skin type and laser wavelength on laser-evoked potentials.

4. A novel temperature-controlled laser system to uniformly activate cutaneous thermal receptors during movable thermal stimulation.

5. High-speed heating of the skin using a contact thermode elicits brain responses comparable to CO 2 laser-evoked potentials.

6. Spinal Nociception is Facilitated during Cognitive Distraction.

7. Tempo-spatial integration of nociceptive stimuli assessed via the nociceptive withdrawal reflex in healthy humans.

8. The two-point discrimination threshold depends both on the stimulation noxiousness and modality.

9. New Insights into Cutaneous Laser Stimulation - Dependency on Skin and Laser Type.

10. Spinal spatial integration of nociception and its functional role assessed via the nociceptive withdrawal reflex and psychophysical measures in healthy humans.

11. Small and large cutaneous fibers display different excitability properties to slowly increasing ramp pulses.

12. Cutaneous nociceptive sensitization affects the directional discrimination - but not the 2-point discrimination.

13. Tempo-spatial discrimination is lower for noxious stimuli than for innocuous stimuli.

14. Membrane properties in small cutaneous nerve fibers in humans.

15. Muscle Activation During Peripheral Nerve Field Stimulation Occurs Due to Recruitment of Efferent Nerve Fibers, Not Direct Muscle Activation.

16. Nerve Fiber Activation During Peripheral Nerve Field Stimulation: Importance of Electrode Orientation and Estimation of Area of Paresthesia.

17. Distinct temporal filtering mechanisms are engaged during dynamic increases and decreases of noxious stimulus intensity.

18. Activation of peripheral nerve fibers by electrical stimulation in the sole of the foot.

19. Experimental and model-based analysis of differences in perception of cutaneous electrical stimulation across the sole of the foot.

20. Analysis of muscle fiber conduction velocity enables reliable detection of surface EMG crosstalk during detection of nociceptive withdrawal reflexes.

21. Novel cross correlation technique allows crosstalk resistant reflex detection from surface EMG.

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