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Cornelius Weiller

Researcher at University of Hamburg

Publications -  69
Citations -  11665

Cornelius Weiller is an academic researcher from University of Hamburg. The author has contributed to research in topics: Motor cortex & Transcranial magnetic stimulation. The author has an hindex of 44, co-authored 69 publications receiving 11188 citations. Previous affiliations of Cornelius Weiller include University Medical Center Freiburg & Schiller International University.

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Ventral and dorsal pathways for language

TL;DR: The function of the dorsal route, traditionally considered to be the major language pathway, is mainly restricted to sensory-motor mapping ofsound to articulation, whereas linguistic processing of sound to meaning requires temporofrontal interaction transmitted via the ventral route.
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Brain stem activation in spontaneous human migraine attacks.

TL;DR: Findings support the idea that the pathogenesis of migraine is related to an imbalance in activity between brain stem nuclei regulating antinociception and vascular control.
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Individual patterns of functional reorganization in the human cerebral cortex after capsular infarction.

TL;DR: Recovery from motor stroke due to striatocapsular damage is associated with individually different patterns of functional reorganization of the brain, dependent on the site of the subcortical lesion and the somatotopic organization of the pyramidal tract, both of which may determine the precise poetntial for recovery of limb function following this type of brain injury.
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Motor cortex plasticity during constraint-induced movement therapy in stroke patients.

TL;DR: Even in chronic stroke patients, reduced motor cortex representations of an affected body part can be enlarged and increased in level of excitability by an effective rehabilitation procedure, demonstrating a CNS correlate of therapy-induced recovery of function after nervous system damage in humans.
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Training-induced brain plasticity in aphasia

TL;DR: This study supports the role of the right hemisphere in recovery from aphasia and demonstrates that the improvement in auditory comprehension induced by specific training is associated with functional brain reorganization.