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Evgeniya Kirilina

Researcher at Max Planck Society

Publications -  61
Citations -  2207

Evgeniya Kirilina is an academic researcher from Max Planck Society. The author has contributed to research in topics: Electron paramagnetic resonance & Substantia nigra. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 55 publications receiving 1524 citations. Previous affiliations of Evgeniya Kirilina include Novosibirsk State University & German National Metrology Institute.

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The physiological origin of task-evoked systemic artefacts in functional near infrared spectroscopy

TL;DR: It is found that skin blood volume strongly depends on the cognitive state and that sources of task-evoked systemic signals in fNIRS are co-localized with veins draining the scalp, and it is concluded that the physiological origin of the systemic artefact is a task- Evoked sympathetic arterial vasoconstriction followed by a decrease in venous volume.
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Locus coeruleus imaging as a biomarker for noradrenergic dysfunction in neurodegenerative diseases

Matthew J. Betts, +59 more
- 01 Sep 2019 - 
TL;DR: How in vivo locus coeruleus imaging can be used as a biomarker for noradrenergic dysfunction in neurodegenerative diseases is described and a strategy for achieving reliable and biologically validated imaging approaches is outlined.
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Identifying and quantifying main components of physiological noise in functional near infrared spectroscopy on the prefrontal cortex

TL;DR: The results demonstrate that proposed de-noising method can significantly improve the sensitivity of fNIRS to cerebral signals and developed a set of physiological regressors, which were used for physiological de- noising of fnIRS signals.
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Changes in Effective Connectivity Between Dorsal and Ventral Prefrontal Regions Moderate Emotion Regulation

TL;DR: This work used fMRI and dynamic causal modeling to characterize the functional interrelationships among dorsal and ventral PFC regions involved in reappraisal and found DLPFC to be the central node of the prefrontal emotion regulation network, strongly interconnected with the IFG.