Zobrazeno 1 - 7
of 7
pro vyhledávání: '"Neslihan Bisgin"'
Autor:
Halil Bisgin, Tanmay Bera, Leihong Wu, Hongjian Ding, Neslihan Bisgin, Zhichao Liu, Monica Pava-Ripoll, Amy Barnes, James F. Campbell, Himansi Vyas, Cesare Furlanello, Weida Tong, Joshua Xu
Publikováno v:
Frontiers in Artificial Intelligence, Vol 5 (2022)
Food samples are routinely screened for food-contaminating beetles (i.e., pantry beetles) due to their adverse impact on the economy, environment, public health and safety. If found, their remains are subsequently analyzed to identify the species res
Externí odkaz:
https://doaj.org/article/b2f92c3b24c34128b48cba38daa0bc75
Publikováno v:
Journal of Computational Social Science. 6:165-190
Publikováno v:
LocalRec@SIGSPATIAL
Businesses constantly seek out customers who are open to testing competitor offerings. While prior research mostly studies consumer surveys and within-store transactions to identify such customers, the current paper analyzes Third-Party mobile phone
Publikováno v:
Neuroscience letters. 750
Background Investigation of fetal evoked response to auditory or visual stimuli is an important means of understanding the developmental stages and potential problems in prenatal life. It is, however, not without certain imperfections. The biggest ch
Publikováno v:
GlobalSIP
SUBTR, a frequency dependent subtraction method, is developed to remove mMCG and fMCG interference from fMEG data. But, in order to protect fMEG while attenuating fMCG, channels around the fetal head cannot be used in the subtraction and SUBTR will l
Autor:
Curtis L. Lowery, Eric R. Siegel, James D. Wilson, Hari Eswaran, Pamela Murphy, Neslihan Bisgin
Publikováno v:
BHI
Our goal was to investigate the relationship between fetal behavioral states (fBS) and noninvasive recording of fetal auditory and visual evoked responses (AER, VER). AER, VER and No-Stimulus (NS) data were recorded using a 151- channel SARA system.
Publikováno v:
Journal of Neuroscience Methods. 336:108620
Background A frequency dependent subtraction method, SUBTR, is developed to remove maternal and fetal magnetocardiography (mMCG and fMCG) interference from fetal magnetoencephalography (fMEG). But channels close to fetal head cannot be used as refere