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Daryl E. Bohning

Researcher at Medical University of South Carolina

Publications -  92
Citations -  6560

Daryl E. Bohning is an academic researcher from Medical University of South Carolina. The author has contributed to research in topics: Transcranial magnetic stimulation & Functional magnetic resonance imaging. The author has an hindex of 42, co-authored 92 publications receiving 6155 citations.

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A potential role for thalamocingulate circuitry in human maternal behavior.

TL;DR: The results partially support the hypotheses of the thalamocingulate theory of maternal behavior, and are generally consistent with neuroanatomical studies of rodent maternal behavior.
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Consensus paper: Combining transcranial stimulation with neuroimaging

TL;DR: How TMS can be combined with various neuroimaging techniques to investigate human brain function is reviewed and the use of specific brain mapping techniques in conjunction with TMS is discussed.
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A combined TMS/fMRI study of intensity-dependent TMS over motor cortex.

TL;DR: Combined TMS/fMRI is both technically feasible and produces measurable dose-dependent changes in brain activity, and the magnitude and temporal onset of TMS induced blood flow changes appear similar to those induced using other motor and cognitive tasks.
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How Coil–Cortex Distance Relates to Age, Motor Threshold, and Antidepressant Response to Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation

TL;DR: There appears to be a maximum threshold of age and distance to prefrontal cortex for response in depressed adults involved in an rTMS antidepressant clinical treatment, and longer motor cortex distance, but not prefrontal distance, strongly correlated with increased motor threshold.
Journal Article

Neural correlates of speech anticipatory anxiety in generalized social phobia.

TL;DR: BOLD-fMRI brain activity while generalized social phobics and healthy controls anticipated making public speeches showed greater subcortical, limbic, and lateral paralimbic activity and less cortical activity in regions important in automatic emotional processing.