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C.C. Liu

Researcher at Johns Hopkins University

Publications -  40
Citations -  475

C.C. Liu is an academic researcher from Johns Hopkins University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Electroencephalography & Epilepsy. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 40 publications receiving 412 citations. Previous affiliations of C.C. Liu include University of Florida & University of Virginia.

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Proceedings ArticleDOI

A Novel Wavelet Based Algorithm for Spike and Wave Detection in Absence Epilepsy

TL;DR: A novel method for detecting and analyzing absence seizures acquired from electroencephalogram (EEG) recordings in patients with absence seizures is presented and only one false positive finding is detected in the first seizure free patients.
Journal ArticleDOI

Painful stimuli evoke potentials recorded from the medial temporal lobe in humans.

TL;DR: The presence of pain-related inputs to the medial temporal lobe where they may be involved in associative learning to produce anxiety and disability related to painful stimuli is demonstrated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Painful cutaneous laser stimuli induce event-related oscillatory EEG activities that are different from those induced by nonpainful electrical stimuli

TL;DR: Modality was the most common factor explaining the results, which is consistent with the hypothesis that the non-phase-locked responses to nonpainful electric cutaneous stimuli are different from those to painful cutaneous laser stimuli when the baseline salience of the two stimuli is the same and the salience during the protocol is modulated by count laser and count electric tasks.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fear conditioning is associated with dynamic directed functional interactions between and within the human amygdala, hippocampus, and frontal lobe.

TL;DR: The hypothesis that habituation and acquisition stages of a fear conditioning protocol are characterized by different event-related causal interactions within and between these modules is tested and suggests that the network subserving fear includes distributed or widespread modules, some of which are themselves "local networks."
Journal ArticleDOI

Spatial attention to thermal pain stimuli in subjects with visual spatial hemi-neglect: Extinction, mislocalization and misidentification of stimulus modality

TL;DR: The results demonstrate that disordered attention exerts a powerful effect upon the perception of both the location and the quality of thermal pain stimuli.