13 results on '"Lazzouni, L."'
Search Results
2. An objective auditory measure to assess speech recognition in adult cochlear implant users
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Turgeon, C., primary, Lazzouni, L., additional, Lepore, F., additional, and Ellemberg, D., additional
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- 2014
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3. Compensatory plasticity: time matters.
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Lazzouni, L. and Lepore, F.
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NEUROPLASTICITY ,SENSORY deprivation ,OCCIPITAL bone ,BLIND people ,VISUAL cortex ,VISUAL pathways ,PERCEPTUAL learning - Abstract
Plasticity in the human and animal brain is the rule, the base for development, and the way to deal effectively with the environment for making the most efficient use of all the senses. When the brain is deprived of one sensory modality, plasticity becomes compensatory: the exception that invalidates the general loss hypothesis giving the opportunity of effective change. Sensory deprivation comes with massive alterations in brain structure and function, behavioural outcomes, and neural interactions. Blind individuals do as good as the sighted and even more, show superior abilities in auditory, tactile and olfactory processing. This behavioural enhancement is accompanied with changes in occipital cortex function, where visual areas at different levels become responsive to non-visual information. The intact senses are in general used more efficiently in the blind but are also used more exclusively. New findings are disentangling these two aspects of compensatory plasticity. What is due to visual deprivation and what is dependent on the extended use of spared modalities? The latter seems to contribute highly to compensatory changes in the congenitally blind. Short term deprivation through the use of blindfolds shows that cortical excitability of the visual cortex is likely to show rapid modulatory changes after few minutes of light deprivation and therefore changes are possible in adulthood. However, reorganization remains more pronounced in the congenitally blind. Cortico-cortical pathways between visual areas and the areas of preserved sensory modalities are inhibited in the presence of vision, but are unmasked after loss of vision or blindfolding as a mechanism likely to drive cross24 modal information to the deafferented visual cortex. The development of specialized higher order visual pathways independently from early sensory experience is likely to preserve their function and switch to the intact modalities. Plasticity in the blind is also accompanied with neurochemical and morphological changes; both intrinsic connectivity and functional coupling at rest are altered but are likewise dependent on different sensory experience and training. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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4. Sigma oscillations protect or reinstate motor memory depending on their temporal coordination with slow waves.
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Nicolas J, King BR, Levesque D, Lazzouni L, Coffey E, Swinnen S, Doyon J, Carrier J, and Albouy G
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- Electroencephalography, Learning physiology, Sleep physiology, Sound, Memory Consolidation physiology
- Abstract
Targeted memory reactivation (TMR) during post-learning sleep is known to enhance motor memory consolidation but the underlying neurophysiological processes remain unclear. Here, we confirm the beneficial effect of auditory TMR on motor performance. At the neural level, TMR enhanced slow wave (SW) characteristics. Additionally, greater TMR-related phase-amplitude coupling between slow (0.5-2 Hz) and sigma (12-16 Hz) oscillations after the SW peak was related to higher TMR effect on performance. Importantly, sounds that were not associated to learning strengthened SW-sigma coupling at the SW trough. Moreover, the increase in sigma power nested in the trough of the potential evoked by the unassociated sounds was related to the TMR benefit. Altogether, our data suggest that, depending on their precise temporal coordination during post learning sleep, slow and sigma oscillations play a crucial role in either memory reinstatement or protection against irrelevant information; two processes that critically contribute to motor memory consolidation., Competing Interests: JN, BK, DL, LL, EC, SS, JD, JC, GA No competing interests declared, (© 2022, Nicolas et al.)
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- 2022
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5. Differential Effects of Speech and Language Therapy and rTMS in Chronic Versus Subacute Post-stroke Aphasia: Results of the NORTHSTAR-CA Trial.
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Zumbansen A, Kneifel H, Lazzouni L, Ophey A, Black SE, Chen JL, Edwards D, Funck T, Hartmann AE, Heiss WD, Hildesheim F, Lanthier S, Lespérance P, Mochizuki G, Paquette C, Rochon E, Rubi-Fessen I, Valles J, Wortman-Jutt S, and Thiel A
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- Humans, Language Therapy, Speech, Speech Therapy methods, Treatment Outcome, Aphasia etiology, Aphasia therapy, Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation methods
- Abstract
Background & Objective: Contralesional 1-Hz repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) over the right pars triangularis combined with speech-language therapy (SLT) has shown positive results on the recovery of naming in subacute (5-45 days) post-stroke aphasia. NORTHSTAR-CA is an extension of the previously reported NORTHSTAR trial to chronic aphasia (>6 months post-stroke) designed to compare the effectiveness of the same rTMS protocol in both phases., Methods: Sixty-seven patients with left middle cerebral artery infarcts (28 chronic, 39 subacute) were recruited (01-2014 to 07-2019) and randomized to receive rTMS (N = 34) or sham stimulation (N = 33) with SLT for 10 days. Primary outcome variables were Z-score changes in naming, semantic fluency and comprehension tests and adverse event frequency. Intention-to-treat analyses tested between-group effects at days 1 and 30 post-treatment. Chronic and subacute results were compared., Results: Adverse events were rare, mild, and did not differ between groups. Language outcomes improved significantly in all groups irrespective of treatment and recovery phase. At 30-day follow-up, there was a significant interaction of stimulation and recovery phase on naming recovery ( P <.001). Naming recovery with rTMS was larger in subacute (Mdn = 1.91/IQR = .77) than chronic patients (Mdn = .15/IQR = 1.68/ P = .015). There was no significant rTMS effect in the chronic aphasia group., Conclusions: The addition of rTMS to SLT led to significant supplemental gains in naming recovery in the subacute phase only. While this needs confirmation in larger studies, our results clarify neuromodulatory vs training-induced effects and indicate a possible window of opportunity for contralesional inhibitory stimulation interventions in post-stroke aphasia., Northstar Trial Registration: https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02020421.
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- 2022
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6. Enhancement of visual biological motion recognition in early-deaf adults: Functional and behavioral correlates.
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Simon M, Lazzouni L, Campbell E, Delcenserie A, Muise-Hennessey A, Newman AJ, Champoux F, and Lepore F
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- Adult, Auditory Cortex diagnostic imaging, Brain Mapping, Female, Gestures, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Photic Stimulation, Temporal Lobe diagnostic imaging, Young Adult, Behavior, Deafness physiopathology, Motion Perception physiology
- Abstract
Deafness leads to brain modifications that are generally associated with a cross-modal activity of the auditory cortex, particularly for visual stimulations. In the present study, we explore the cortical processing of biological motion that conveyed either non-communicative (pantomimes) or communicative (emblems) information, in early-deaf and hearing individuals, using fMRI analyses. Behaviorally, deaf individuals showed an advantage in detecting communicative gestures relative to hearing individuals. Deaf individuals also showed significantly greater activation in the superior temporal cortex (including the planum temporale and primary auditory cortex) than hearing individuals. The activation levels in this region were correlated with deaf individuals' response times. This study provides neural and behavioral evidence that cross-modal plasticity leads to functional advantages in the processing of biological motion following lifelong auditory deprivation., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
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- 2020
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7. Expected value and sensitivity to punishment modulate insular cortex activity during risky decision making.
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Von Siebenthal Z, Boucher O, Lazzouni L, Taylor V, Martinu K, Roy M, Rainville P, Lepore F, and Nguyen DK
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- Adult, Behavior, Brain Mapping, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Oxygen blood, Task Performance and Analysis, Young Adult, Cerebral Cortex physiology, Decision Making, Punishment psychology, Risk-Taking
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The exact contribution of the insula to risky decision making remains unclear, as are the specific outcome parameters and inter-individual characteristics that modulate insular activity prior to a risky choice. This fMRI study examines the contributions of outcome valence, magnitude, probability, and expected value (EV) to insular activity during risky decision making, and explores the influence of sensitivity to reward and to punishment, and anxiety, to insular activity. Participants (N = 31) performed a gambling task requiring choice between two roulettes with different outcome magnitude, probability and EV, under gain and loss conditions separately, and filled questionnaires assessing sensitivity to punishment/reward, and state/trait anxiety. Parametric analyses were conducted to examine the modulation of brain activity during decision making in relation to each task parameter. Correlations were examined between insular activity and psychometric questionnaires. EV of the selected roulette was associated with right posterior insula activation during decision making. Higher sensitivity to punishment was associated with lower bilateral insular activation. These findings suggest that the right posterior insula is involved in tracking the EV of a risky option during decision making. The involvement of the insula when making risky decisions also appears to be influenced by inter-individual differences in sensitivity to punishment.
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- 2020
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8. Neuronal mechanisms of motion detection underlying blindsight assessed by functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI).
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Tran A, MacLean MW, Hadid V, Lazzouni L, Nguyen DK, Tremblay J, Dehaes M, and Lepore F
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- Adult, Brain Mapping, Female, Hemianopsia diagnostic imaging, Hemianopsia psychology, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Photic Stimulation, Psychomotor Performance, Reaction Time, Visual Cortex diagnostic imaging, Visual Cortex physiopathology, Visual Pathways diagnostic imaging, Visual Pathways physiopathology, Blindness diagnostic imaging, Blindness psychology, Motion Perception, Neurons
- Abstract
Brain imaging offers a valuable tool to observe functional brain plasticity by showing how sensory inputs reshape cortical activations after a visual impairment. Following a unilateral post-chiasmatic lesion affecting the visual cortex, patients may suffer a contralateral visual loss referred to homonymous hemianopia. Nevertheless, these patients preserve the ability to unconsciously detect, localize and discriminate visual stimuli presented in their impaired visual field. To investigate this paradox, known as blindsight, we conducted a study using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to evaluate the structural and functional impact of such lesion in a 33-year old patient (ML), who suffers a complete right hemianopia without macular sparing and showing strong evidences of blindsight. We thus performed whole brain and sliced thalamic fMRI scan sequences during an event-related motion detection task. We provided evidence of the neuronal fingerprint of blindsight by acquiring and associating neural correlates, specific structures and functional networks of the midbrain during blindsight performances which may help to better understand this condition. Accurate performance demonstrated the presence of residual vision and the ability to unconsciously perceive motion presented in the blind hemifield, although her reaction time was significantly higher in her blind-field. When the normal hemifield was stimulated, we observed significant contralateral activations in primary and secondary visual areas as well as motion specific areas, such as the supramarginal gyrus and middle temporal area. We also demonstrated sub-thalamic activations within the superior colliculi (SC) and the pulvinar. These results suggest a role of secondary subcortical structures in normal spontaneous motion detection. In a similar way, when the lesioned hemifield was stimulated, we observed contralateral activity in extrastriate areas with no activation of the primary lesioned visual cortex. Moreover, we observed activations within the SC when the blind hemifield was stimulated. However, we observed unexpected ipsilateral activations within the same motion specific areas, as well as bilateral frontal activations. These results highlight the importance of abnormal secondary pathways bypassing the primary visual area (V1) in residual vision. This reorganization in the structure and function of the visual pathways correlates with behavioral changes, thus offering a plausible explanation for the blindsight phenomenon. Our results may potentially impact the development of rehabilitation strategies to target subcortical pathways., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2019
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9. Recruitment of the occipital cortex by arithmetic processing follows computational bias in the congenitally blind.
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Crollen V, Lazzouni L, Rezk M, Bellemare A, Lepore F, Noël MP, Seron X, and Collignon O
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- Adult, Blindness congenital, Cerebral Cortex diagnostic imaging, Cerebral Cortex physiopathology, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Nerve Net physiopathology, Occipital Lobe diagnostic imaging, Occipital Lobe physiopathology, Young Adult, Blindness physiopathology, Brain Mapping methods, Cerebral Cortex physiology, Mathematical Concepts, Nerve Net physiology, Occipital Lobe physiology, Thinking physiology
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Arithmetic reasoning activates the occipital cortex of congenitally blind people (CB). This activation of visual areas may highlight the functional flexibility of occipital regions deprived of their dominant inputs or relate to the intrinsic computational role of specific occipital regions. We contrasted these competing hypotheses by characterizing the brain activity of CB and sighted participants while performing subtraction, multiplication and a control letter task. In both groups, subtraction selectively activated a bilateral dorsal network commonly activated during spatial processing. Multiplication triggered activity in temporal regions thought to participate in memory retrieval. No between-group difference was observed for the multiplication task whereas subtraction induced enhanced activity in the right dorsal occipital cortex of the blind individuals only. As this area overlaps with regions showing selective tuning to auditory spatial processing and exhibits increased functional connectivity with a dorsal "spatial" network, our results suggest that the recruitment of occipital regions during high-level cognition in the blind actually relates to the intrinsic computational role of the activated regions., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2019
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10. Visual Experience Shapes the Neural Networks Remapping Touch into External Space.
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Crollen V, Lazzouni L, Rezk M, Bellemare A, Lepore F, and Collignon O
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- Adult, Blindness diagnostic imaging, Female, Frontal Lobe diagnostic imaging, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging methods, Male, Middle Aged, Nerve Net diagnostic imaging, Parietal Lobe diagnostic imaging, Physical Stimulation methods, Reaction Time physiology, Young Adult, Blindness physiopathology, Frontal Lobe physiology, Nerve Net physiology, Parietal Lobe physiology, Space Perception physiology, Touch Perception physiology
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Localizing touch relies on the activation of skin-based and externally defined spatial frames of reference. Psychophysical studies have demonstrated that early visual deprivation prevents the automatic remapping of touch into external space. We used fMRI to characterize how visual experience impacts the brain circuits dedicated to the spatial processing of touch. Sighted and congenitally blind humans performed a tactile temporal order judgment (TOJ) task, either with the hands uncrossed or crossed over the body midline. Behavioral data confirmed that crossing the hands has a detrimental effect on TOJ judgments in sighted but not in early blind people. Crucially, the crossed hand posture elicited enhanced activity, when compared with the uncrossed posture, in a frontoparietal network in the sighted group only. Psychophysiological interaction analysis revealed, however, that the congenitally blind showed enhanced functional connectivity between parietal and frontal regions in the crossed versus uncrossed hand postures. Our results demonstrate that visual experience scaffolds the neural implementation of the location of touch in space. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT In daily life, we seamlessly localize touch in external space for action planning toward a stimulus making contact with the body. For efficient sensorimotor integration, the brain has therefore to compute the current position of our limbs in the external world. In the present study, we demonstrate that early visual deprivation alters the brain activity in a dorsal parietofrontal network typically supporting touch localization in the sighted. Our results therefore conclusively demonstrate the intrinsic role that developmental vision plays in scaffolding the neural implementation of touch perception., (Copyright © 2017 the authors 0270-6474/17/3710097-07$15.00/0.)
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- 2017
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11. Crossmodal Processing of Haptic Inputs in Sighted and Blind Individuals.
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Voss P, Alary F, Lazzouni L, Chapman CE, Goldstein R, Bourgoin P, and Lepore F
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In a previous behavioral study, it was shown that early blind individuals were superior to sighted ones in discriminating two-dimensional (2D) tactile angle stimuli. The present study was designed to assess the neural substrate associated with a haptic 2D angle discrimination task in both sighted and blind individuals. Subjects performed tactile angle size discriminations in order to investigate whether the pattern of crossmodal occipital recruitment was lateralized as a function of the stimulated hand. Task-elicited activations were also compared across different difficulty levels to ascertain the potential modulatory role of task difficulty on crossmodal processing within occipital areas. We show that blind subjects had more widespread activation within the right lateral and superior occipital gyri when performing the haptic discrimination task. In contrast, the sighted activated the left cuneus and lingual gyrus more so than the blind when performing the task. Furthermore, activity within visual areas was shown to be predictive of tactile discrimination thresholds in the blind, but not in the sighted. Activity within parietal and occipital areas was modulated by task difficulty, where the easier angle comparison elicited more focal occipital activity along with bilateral posterior parietal activity, whereas the more difficult comparison produced more widespread occipital activity combined with reduced parietal activation. Finally, we show that crossmodal reorganization within the occipital cortex of blind individuals was primarily right lateralized, regardless of the stimulated hand, supporting previous evidence for a right-sided hemispheric specialization of the occipital cortex of blind individuals for the processing of tactile and haptic inputs.
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- 2016
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12. Short-term crossmodal plasticity of the auditory steady-state response in blindfolded sighted individuals.
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Lazzouni L, Voss P, and Lepore F
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- Acoustic Stimulation methods, Adult, Analysis of Variance, Brain Mapping, Female, Functional Laterality physiology, Humans, Magnetoencephalography, Male, Reaction Time, Spectrum Analysis, Young Adult, Auditory Cortex physiology, Evoked Potentials, Auditory physiology, Neuronal Plasticity physiology, Sensory Deprivation physiology, Sound Localization physiology, Vision, Ocular
- Abstract
This study investigated the effect of short-term visual deprivation on auditory steady-state response (ASSR) to amplitude-modulated tones. Magnetoencephalography data were acquired while subjects performed an auditory detection task under both monaural and dichotic presentation conditions. Analyses were performed on the spectral power, mean amplitudes and dipole positions of the ASSR at the onset of blindfolding, as well as after 2, 4 and 6 h of visual deprivation. Results show a modulation of the spectral power of the ASSR at the frequencies that were present in the stimulus after 6 h of sensory deprivation, and this was especially true for the dichotic condition. Moreover, participants showed two spectral peaks in the occipital cortex at the end of the visual deprivation period, a phenomenon normally observed in the auditory cortex. Our results shed light not only on the timeline associated with short-term crossmodal recruitment of input-deprived sensory cortices but also demonstrate that the visual cortex can display auditory cortex-like functioning in response to the ASSR. Importantly, our results also highlight the importance of taking into consideration individual differences when investigating crossmodal plastic phenomena. Indeed, the occipital spectral peaks were only observed in half the subjects following short-term deprivation., (© 2012 The Authors. European Journal of Neuroscience © 2012 Federation of European Neuroscience Societies and Blackwell Publishing Ltd.)
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- 2012
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13. Neuromagnetic auditory steady-state responses to amplitude modulated sounds following dichotic or monaural presentation.
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Lazzouni L, Ross B, Voss P, and Lepore F
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- Acoustic Stimulation methods, Adult, Auditory Pathways physiology, Ear physiology, Female, Humans, Magnetoencephalography methods, Male, Neural Pathways physiology, Pitch Perception physiology, Reaction Time physiology, Sound Localization physiology, Young Adult, Auditory Cortex physiology, Auditory Perception physiology, Dominance, Cerebral physiology, Evoked Potentials, Auditory physiology, Functional Laterality physiology
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Objective: The goal of the present study was to further our understanding of how attention directed to carrier frequency changes in amplitude-modulated tones (AM) affects the auditory steady-state response (ASSR)., Methods: ASSR in the 40-Hz range were recorded in 15 adults using the frequency tagging method while subjects detected a carrier frequency change in amplitude-modulated tones. Spectral and temporal domain analyses were performed to examine the effect on response amplitudes during attending to the tones compared to ignoring them for both monaural and dichotic stimulations., Results: Larger responses were found in the hemisphere contralateral to the stimulated ear. Binaural suppression for ipsilateral input was found in both hemispheres. Time series of the source waveforms were calculated from equivalent current dipoles and showed a 2Hz beat for the dichotic presentation. Attention to carrier frequency change was significant only during dichotic presentation where larger right hemisphere responses were found at the onset of carrier change., Conclusions: Attending to carrier frequency change in stimulation enhances the right hemisphere ASSR amplitude for dichotic stimulation., Significance: The possibility of tagging frequency specific responses up to auditory cortex makes the ASSR approach interesting for studying hearing impairment mechanisms, integrity of auditory structures and attention., (Copyright (c) 2009 International Federation of Clinical Neurophysiology. Published by Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2010
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