Department of Multimedia Systems - Administrative Units - Bridge of Knowledge

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Catalog Publications

Year 2024
Year 2023
  • Examining the Impact of Distance Between VSL Road Signs on Vehicle Speed Variance
    Publication

    - IEEE Access - Year 2023

    Variable speed limit (VSL) is an intelligent transportation system (ITS) solution for traffic management. The speed limits can be changed dynamically to adapt to traffic conditions such as visibility and traffic volume, curvature, and grip coefficient of the road surface. The VSL traffic sign location problem and attempts to solve it using computer simulation are presented in this paper. Experiments on a selected road segment,...

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Year 2022
Year 2021
  • Evaluation of Six Degrees of Freedom 3D Audio Orchestra Recording and Playback using multi-point Ambisonic interpolation
    Publication
    • T. Ciotucha
    • A. Rumiński
    • T. Żernicki
    • B. Mróz

    - Scopus - Year 2021

    This paper describes a strategy for recording sound and enabling six-degrees-of-freedom playback, making use of multiple simultaneous and synchronized Higher Order Ambisonics (HOA) recordings. Such a strategy enables users to navigate in a simulated 3D space and listen to the six-degrees-of-freedom recordings from different perspectives. For the evaluation of the proposed approach, an Unreal Engine-based navigable 3D audiovisual...

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Year 2020
Year 2019
Year 2018
Year 2017
  • Widespread theta synchrony and high-frequency desynchronization underlies enhanced cognition
    Publication
    • E. Solomon
    • J. Kragiel
    • M. R. Sperling
    • A. Sharan
    • G. Worrell
    • M. T. Kucewicz
    • C. S. Inman
    • B. Lega
    • K. A. Davis
    • J. M. Stein... and 5 others

    - Nature Communications - Year 2017

    The idea that synchronous neural activity underlies cognition has driven an extensive body of research in human and animal neuroscience. Yet, insufficient data on intracranial electrical connectivity has precluded a direct test of this hypothesis in a whole-brain setting. Through the lens of memory encoding and retrieval processes, we construct whole-brain connectivity maps of fast gamma (30-100 Hz) and slow theta (3-8 Hz) spectral...

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  • Reactivation of seizure‐related changes to interictal spike shape and synchrony during postseizure sleep in patients
    Publication
    • M. R. Bower
    • M. T. Kucewicz
    • E. K. St. Louis
    • F. Meyer
    • W. R. Marsh
    • M. Stead
    • G. A. Worrell

    - EPILEPSIA - Year 2017

    OBJECTIVE: Local field potentials (LFPs) arise from synchronous activation of millions of neurons, producing seemingly consistent waveform shapes and relative synchrony across electrodes. Interictal spikes (IISs) are LFPs associated with epilepsy that are commonly used to guide surgical resection. Recently, changes in neuronal firing patterns observed in the minutes preceding seizure onset were found to be reactivated during postseizure...

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  • Dissecting gamma frequency activities during human memory processing
    Publication
    • M. T. Kucewicz
    • B. M. Berry
    • V. Kremen
    • B. H. Brinkmann
    • M. R. Sperling
    • B. C. Jobst
    • R. E. Gross
    • B. Lega
    • S. A. Sheth
    • J. M. Stein... and 6 others

    - Brain: A Journal of Neurology - Year 2017

    Gamma frequency activity (30-150 Hz) is induced in cognitive tasks and is thought to reflect underlying neural processes. Gamma frequency activity can be recorded directly from the human brain using intracranial electrodes implanted in patients undergoing treatment for drug-resistant epilepsy. Previous studies have independently explored narrowband oscillations in the local field potential and broadband power increases. It is not...

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  • Direct brain stimulation modulates encoding states and memory performance in humans
    Publication
    • Y. Ezzyat
    • J. E. Kragel
    • J. F. Burke
    • D. F. Levy
    • A. Lyalenko
    • P. Wanda
    • L. O'Sullivan
    • K. B. Hurley
    • S. Busygin
    • I. Pedisich... and 16 others

    - CURRENT BIOLOGY - Year 2017

    People often forget information because they fail to effectively encode it. Here, we test the hypothesis that targeted electrical stimulation can modulate neural encoding states and subsequent memory outcomes. Using recordings from neurosurgical epilepsy patients with intracranially implanted electrodes, we trained multivariate classifiers to discriminate spectral activity during learning that predicted remembering from forgetting,...

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