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Stephen T. Foldes
Also published under:S. T. Foldes
Affiliation
University of Pittsburgh
Topic
Able-bodied Individuals,Brain States,Linear Discriminant Analysis,Magnetoencephalography Data,Magnetoencephalography Signals,Spinal Cord Injury,3-fold Cross-validation,Active Switches,Assistive Technology,Bipolar Electrode,Brain Activity,Brain-computer Interface System,Classification Accuracy,Classification Performance,Command Signal,Constrained Optimization,Constrained Optimization Problem,Contralateral Area,Cueing Task,Current Dipole,Decode Brain States,Decoding,Decoding Accuracy,Decoding Algorithm,Decoding Performance,Depth Estimation,Different Amounts Of Data,Discriminant Analysis,Discriminative Patterns,EMG Data,EMG Signals,Electrical Activity,Electrodeposition,Electromyographic Activity,Electromyography Signals,False Positive Rate,Fast Fourier Transform,FreeSurfer,High Spatial Resolution,Imagined Movement,Left Sensorimotor,Linear Classifier,Linear Subspace,M-current,Magnetic Field,Magnetometer,Masticatory Muscles,Minimum Amount Of Data,Minutes Of Data,Multiple Cortical Regions,
Biography
Stephen T. Foldes received the Ph.D. degree in biomedical engineering
from Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH, USA, in 2011.
He is currently a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA. His primary research interests include neurorehabilitation, brain–computer interfaces, neuroimaging, and plasticity after paralysis. He received both the NIH Individual Predoctoral Fellowship (NRSA-F31) in 2010 and the VA Predoctoral Associated Health Rehabilitation Research Fellowship in 2009.
He is currently a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA. His primary research interests include neurorehabilitation, brain–computer interfaces, neuroimaging, and plasticity after paralysis. He received both the NIH Individual Predoctoral Fellowship (NRSA-F31) in 2010 and the VA Predoctoral Associated Health Rehabilitation Research Fellowship in 2009.