scispace - formally typeset
G

Gereon R. Fink

Researcher at Forschungszentrum Jülich

Publications -  976
Citations -  67974

Gereon R. Fink is an academic researcher from Forschungszentrum Jülich. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Functional magnetic resonance imaging. The author has an hindex of 114, co-authored 867 publications receiving 60853 citations. Previous affiliations of Gereon R. Fink include University of Geneva & University of Hamburg.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Where is a Nose with Respect to a Foot? The Left Posterior Parietal Cortex Processes Spatial Relationships among Body Parts

TL;DR: The results show that the left IPS processes specifically the information about spatial relationships among body parts and thereby suggest that damage to this area may underlie autotopagnosia.
Journal ArticleDOI

Management of therapeutic anticoagulation in patients with intracerebral haemorrhage and mechanical heart valves.

TL;DR: Restarting TA within less than 2 weeks after ICH in patients with MHV was associated with increased haemorrhagic complications, andOptimal weighing—between least risks for thromboembolic and haemorsized complications—provided an earliest starting point of TA at Day 6, reserved only for patients at high throm boembolic risk.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cognitive training with and without additional physical activity in healthy older adults: cognitive effects, neurobiological mechanisms, and prediction of training success

TL;DR: The data do not support the hypotheses that CPT shows superior CT gains compared to CT or that C PT+C adds merit to CPT, but as CPT leads to additional gains in physical fitness which in turn is known to have positive impact on cognition in the long-term, CPT seems more beneficial.
Journal ArticleDOI

Individual prediction of chronic motor outcome in the acute post-stroke stage: Behavioral parameters versus functional imaging

TL;DR: Multivariate decoding of fMRI data with SVM early after stroke enables a robust prediction of motor recovery, particularly in those patients whose outcome cannot be predicted by behavioral tests.
Journal ArticleDOI

Psychogenic movement disorders: aetiology, phenomenology, neuroanatomical correlates and therapeutic approaches.

TL;DR: The aetiology, clinical phenomenology, the current concepts of the dynamic neuroanatomical networks underlying psychogenic neurological syndromes as elucidated by neuroimaging and their potential implications for novel therapeutic approaches are discussed.