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Elisabeth V. C. Friedrich
Researcher at University of California, San Diego
Publications - 32
Citations - 922
Elisabeth V. C. Friedrich is an academic researcher from University of California, San Diego. The author has contributed to research in topics: Motor imagery & Neurofeedback. The author has an hindex of 15, co-authored 26 publications receiving 804 citations. Previous affiliations of Elisabeth V. C. Friedrich include Graz University of Technology & University of Graz.
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Journal ArticleDOI
The effect of distinct mental strategies on classification performance for brain-computer interfaces
Elisabeth V. C. Friedrich,Elisabeth V. C. Friedrich,Reinhold Scherer,Christa Neuper,Christa Neuper +4 more
TL;DR: The results indicate that a combination of 'brain-teasers' - tasks that require problem specific mental work and dynamic imagery tasks (e.g. motor imagery) result in highly distinguishable brain patterns that lead to an increased performance.
Journal ArticleDOI
Near-infrared spectroscopy based neurofeedback training increases specific motor imagery related cortical activation compared to sham feedback
Silvia Erika Kober,Guilherme Wood,Jürgen Kurzmann,Elisabeth V. C. Friedrich,Elisabeth V. C. Friedrich,Matthias Stangl,T. Wippel,Aleksander Väljamäe,Christa Neuper,Christa Neuper +9 more
TL;DR: Real neurofeedback induced specific and focused brain activation over left motor areas over the eight training sessions and can be useful when training patients with focal brain lesions to increase activity of specific brain areas for rehabilitation purpose.
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Whatever works: a systematic user-centered training protocol to optimize brain-computer interfacing individually.
TL;DR: A systematic user-centered training protocol for a 4-class brain-computer interface (BCI) that is highly adjustable to individual users and thus could increase the percentage of users who can gain and maintain BCI control.
Journal ArticleDOI
Brain-computer interface game applications for combined neurofeedback and biofeedback treatment for children on the autism spectrum.
Elisabeth V. C. Friedrich,Neil Suttie,Aparajithan Sivanathan,Theodore Lim,Sandy Louchart,Jaime A. Pineda +5 more
TL;DR: An innovative game is designed that includes social interactions and provides neural- and body-based feedback that corresponds directly to the underlying significance of the trained signals as well as to the behavior that is reinforced.
Journal ArticleDOI
An Effective Neurofeedback Intervention to Improve Social Interactions in Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Elisabeth V. C. Friedrich,Aparajithan Sivanathan,Theodore Lim,Neil Suttie,Sandy Louchart,Sandy Louchart,Steven Pillen,Jaime A. Pineda +7 more
TL;DR: These NFT paradigms improve aspects of behavior necessary for successful social interactions and show improvements in electrophysiology, emotion recognition and spontaneous imitation, and behavior.