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Enrico Schulz

Researcher at Technische Universität München

Publications -  28
Citations -  2556

Enrico Schulz is an academic researcher from Technische Universität München. The author has contributed to research in topics: Dyslexia & Chronic pain. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 24 publications receiving 2166 citations. Previous affiliations of Enrico Schulz include University of Zurich & Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich.

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Predictors of developmental dyslexia in European orthographies with varying complexity

TL;DR: Phoneme deletion and RAN were strong concurrent predictors of developmental dyslexia, while verbal ST/WM and general verbal abilities played a comparatively minor role, demonstrating how orthographic complexity exacerbates some symptoms of Dyslexia.
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Cognitive mechanisms underlying reading and spelling development in five European orthographies

TL;DR: This article analyzed concurrent predictions of phonological processing (awareness and memory) and rapid automatized naming (RAN) for literacy development in a rural area of the United States and found that the cognitive underpinnings of reading and spelling are universal or language/orthography-specific.
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The left occipitotemporal system in reading: disruption of focal fMRI connectivity to left inferior frontal and inferior parietal language areas in children with dyslexia.

TL;DR: It is shown that functional disconnection of the left occipitotemporal system is limited to the small VWFA region crucial for automatic visual word processing, and emerges early during reading acquisition in children with dyslexia, along with deficits in orthographic and phonological processing of visual word forms.
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Prefrontal Gamma Oscillations Encode Tonic Pain in Humans

TL;DR: This study applied tonic painful heat stimuli of varying degree to healthy human subjects, obtained continuous pain ratings, and recorded electroencephalograms to relate ongoing pain to brain activity, revealing that the subjective perception of tonic pain is selectively encoded by gamma oscillations in the medial prefrontal cortex.