Refine
Year of publication
Institute
- Fachbereich Medizintechnik und Technomathematik (1936) (remove)
Has Fulltext
- no (1936) (remove)
Document Type
- Article (1544)
- Conference Proceeding (153)
- Book (97)
- Part of a Book (62)
- Doctoral Thesis (28)
- Patent (17)
- Report (13)
- Other (8)
- Conference: Meeting Abstract (4)
- Habilitation (4)
Keywords
- LAPS (4)
- Natural language processing (4)
- CellDrum (3)
- Field-effect sensor (3)
- Light-addressable potentiometric sensor (3)
- Paired sample (3)
- hydrogen peroxide (3)
- impedance spectroscopy (3)
- Bacillus atrophaeus (2)
- Biocomposites (2)
Weak Representation of the Cumulative Hazard Function under Semiparametric Random Censorship Models
(2001)
An ISFET-based penicillin sensor with high sensitivity, low detection limit and long lifetime
(2001)
Penicillin detection by means of field-effect based sensors: EnFET, capacitive EIS sensor or LAPS?
(2001)
Novel concepts for flow-rate and flow-direction determination by means of pH-sensitive ISFETs
(2001)
Optimization of passivation layers for corrosion protection of silicon-based microelectrode arrays
(2000)
A network of brain areas is expected to be involved in supporting the motion aftereffect. The most active components of this network were determined by means of an fMRI study of nine subjects exposed to a visual stimulus of moving bars producing the effect. Across the subjects, common areas were identified during various stages of the effect, as well as networks of areas specific to a single stage. In addition to the well-known motion-sensitive area MT the prefrontal brain areas BA44 and 47 and the cingulate gyrus, as well as posterior sites such as BA37 and BA40, were important components during the period of the motion aftereffect experience. They appear to be involved in control circuitry for selecting which of a number of processing styles is appropriate. The experimental fMRI results of the activation levels and their time courses for the various areas are explored. Correlation analysis shows that there are effectively two separate and weakly coupled networks involved in the total process. Implications of the results for awareness of the effect itself are briefly considered in the final discussion.
A 2-dimensional detector system for high resolution thyroid I-131 scintigraphy was developed. It has a sensitive area of 4 cm×4 cm and consists of a lead-collimator and an array of 10×10 EGO crystals combined with a position sensitive photomultiplier. The spatial resolution and the sensitivity of the detector has been measured and compared to two commercially available gamma-cameras. Furthermore first patient measurements have been carried out