Publikationen von W Grodd

Poster (90)

221.
Poster
Kammer, T.; Erb, M.; Beck, S.; Grodd, W.: Zur Topographie von Phosphenen: Eine Studie mit fMRT und TMS. 3. Tübinger Wahrnehmungskonferenz (TWK 2000), Tübingen, Germany (2000)
222.
Poster
Wild, B.; Erb, M.; Bartels, M.; Grodd, W.: Perception of emotionally expressive faces and its interaction with facial movements: a fMRI study of occipital lobe activation. 3. Tübinger Wahrnehmungskonferenz (TWK 2000), Tübingen, Germany (2000)
223.
Poster
Kobal, G.; Kettenmann, B.; Erb, M.; Ditterich, W.; Klusmann, A.; Klose, U.; Pfister, M.; Grodd, W.: Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI)of the human brain during olfactory stimulation. Twentieth Annual Meeting of the Association for Chemoreception Sciences (AChemS 1998), Sarasota, FL, USA (1998)
224.
Poster
Britsch, P.; Grodd, W.; Klose, U.; Ackermann, H.; Voigt, K.: Functional MRI of the cerebellum during voluntary hand and foot movement with multislice EPI. Second International Conference on Functional Mapping of the Human Brain (OHBM 1996), Boston, MA, USA (1996)
225.
Poster
Erb, M.; Wildgruber, D.; Klose, U.; Britsch, P.; Grodd, W.: fMRI of sequential activation of supplementary motor area and primary motor cortex during voluntary movement. Second International Conference on Functional Mapping of the Human Brain (OHBM 1996), Boston, MA, USA (1996)
226.
Poster
Klose, U.; Wildgruber, D.; Britsch, P.; Grodd, W.: Evaluation of fMRI data using pixel specific target functions. Second International Conference on Functional Mapping of the Human Brain (OHBM 1996), Boston, MA, USA (1996)
227.
Poster
Wildgruber, D.; Ackermann, H.; Klose, U.; Kardatzki, B.; Grodd, W.: Specific functional lateralization for different aspects of speech production in the primary motor cortex. Second International Conference on Functional Mapping of the Human Brain (OHBM 1996), Boston, MA, USA (1996)

Preprint (1)

228.
Preprint
Lohmann, G.; Stelzer, J.; Mueller, K.; Lacosse, E.; Buschmann, T.; Kumar, V.; Grodd, W.; Scheffler, K.: Inflated False Negative Rates Undermine Reproducibility In Task-Based fMRI. (eingereicht)
Zur Redakteursansicht