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Montclair State University

2 ARTICLES PUBLISHED IN JoVE

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Neuroscience

Employing Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation in a Resource Limited Environment to Establish Brain-Behavior Relationships
Taylor Shelansky 1, Katherine Chavarria 1, Kitty Pagano 1, Sarah Sierra 1, Vanessa Martinez 1, Nathira Ahmad 1, Janet Brenya 1, Aleksandra Janowska 1, Samantha Zorns 1, Abigail Straus 1, Victoria Mistretta 1, Brianna Balugas 1, Matthew Pardillo 1, Julian Paul Keenan 1
1The Cognitive Neuroimaging Laboratory, Montclair State University

Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) and low-frequency TMS (lfTMS) have been demonstrated to be major contributors to brain literature. Here we highlight the methods for investigating the cortical correlates of self-deception using TMS.

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Neuroscience

The Sol Braiding Method for Handling Thick Hair During Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation: An Address for Potential Bias in Brain Stimulation
Qiana Archer 1, Janet Brenya 1, Katherine Chavaria 2, Anjel Friest 3, Nathira Ahmad 4, Samantha Zorns 1, Sahana Vaidya 1, Taylor Shelanskey 1, Sarah Sierra 1, Sydney Ash 1, Briana Balugus 5, Alexa Alvarez 6, Mathew Pardillo 1, Roy Hamilton 7, Julian Paul Keenan 1
1Cognitive Neuroimaging Laboratory, Montclair State University, 2School of Osteopathic Medicine, Rowan University, 3Department of Biology, Rutgers University, 4Department of Health Informatics, Rutgers University, 5Department of Physician Assistant, Seton Hall University, 6School of Nursing, Felician College, 7Laboratory for Cognition and Neural Stimulation, University of Pennsylvania

Hair type commonly seen in historically underrepresented minorities appears to interfere with transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS). Here we describe a hair braiding method (The Sol Braiding Technique) that improves TMS.

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