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Florinda Ferreri

Researcher at University of Padua

Publications -  105
Citations -  7290

Florinda Ferreri is an academic researcher from University of Padua. The author has contributed to research in topics: Transcranial magnetic stimulation & Electroencephalography. The author has an hindex of 36, co-authored 79 publications receiving 5968 citations. Previous affiliations of Florinda Ferreri include University of Messina & University of Eastern Finland.

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In Human Implant of Intraneural Multielectrodes for Controlling a 5-Fingered Hand Prosthesis and Delivering Sensorial Feedback

TL;DR: Training for robotic hand control and for sensory perception produced a normalization in the electroencephalographic activation pattern and a reorganization of the motor cortical maps as evaluated via TMS, with restriction of the cortical overrepresentation of muscles proximal to the stump.
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Preoperative Repetitive Navigated TMS and Functional White Matter Tractography in a Bilingual Patient with a Brain Tumor in Wernike Area.

TL;DR: In this paper, a bilingual patient affected by brain tumor in the left temporal lobe, who underwent repetitive navigated transcranial magnetic stimulation (rnTMS) associated with functional subcortical fiber tracking (nTMS-based DTI-FT) represents a promising and comprehensive mapping tool to display language pathway and function reorganization in neurosurgical patients.
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Adjunctive Brivaracetam in Older Patients with Focal Seizures: Evidence from the BRIVAracetam add‑on First Italian netwoRk Study (BRIVAFIRST)

Simona Lattanzi, +131 more
- 28 Mar 2022 - 
TL;DR: The BRIVAFIRST (BRIVAracetam add-on First Italian netwoRk STudy) study as discussed by the authors was a 12-month retrospective multicenter study including adult patients prescribed adjunctive brivaracetam.
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Unilateral cortical hyperexcitability in congenital hydrocephalus: A TMS study

TL;DR: It is hypothesize that in this ambidextrous subject, the observed RH hyper-excitability could represent a mechanism of plasticity to preserve functionality of specific brain areas possibly devoted to some special skills, such as multilingualism.