resources and downloads
… some selected stuff from scientific conferences and travels
3rd International Mobile Brain/Body Imaging Conference

July 2018
MoBI conference (Berlin, Germany)
Presented poster:
„Human retrosplenial activity during physical and virtual heading changes revealed by mobile brain-body imaging (MoBI)“
International Deep Brain Stimulation Symposium

November 2016
Intern. DBS symposium (Berlin, Germany)
Presented poster:
„Is it a word or pseudo word? Optimized extraction of cortico- subthalamic interactions as biomarker of lexical decisions in Parkinsonian patients“
2nd International Conference on Deep Brain Stimulation

March 2016
Intern. Conference DBS (Düsseldorf, Germany)
Presented poster:
„Cortico-subthalamic neural interactions: relation to cognitive task performance and evidence for a novel interaction mode across multiple time scales in patients with Parkinson’s disease“
2nd International Symposium of the Clinical Research Group 219

February 2015
Intern. Symposium 219 (Köln, Germany)
Presented poster:
Multiscale interactions – a novel relation between cortical and subthalamic neural dynamics in patients with Parkinson’s disease“
Human Brain Mapping conference

June 2014
Human Brain Mapping Conference (Hamburg, Germany)
Presented poster:
„Beyond volume conduction: toward genuine functional connectivity between bilateral basal ganglia“
Talk @ The Center for Complex Systems and Brain Sciences (FAU)


August 2014
It was my great pleasure to visit Prof. Scott Kelso’s Human Brain and Behavior Lab at The Center for Complex Systems and Brain Sciences, Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton) for a week, and to give my talk:
„To move and not to move – neural variability and quasi-movements in the Parkinsonian and healthy motor system“
Covering my postdoc research and my PhD topic „quasi-movements“ (can be conceived as a subquantum of action).
Acknowledgements: travel funding by DAAD.
talk @ National Institute of Health (Washington, D.C.)

April 2014
It was my great pleasure to visit Prof. Mark Hallett’s lab (Neurology, Human Motor Control Section) at the National Institute of Health and to give my talk:
„To move or not no move – neural correlates in the Parkinsonian and healthy motor system“.