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Letizia Leocani

Researcher at Università telematica San Raffaele

Publications -  72
Citations -  4192

Letizia Leocani is an academic researcher from Università telematica San Raffaele. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Multiple sclerosis. The author has an hindex of 26, co-authored 41 publications receiving 3193 citations. Previous affiliations of Letizia Leocani include National Institutes of Health & University of Milan.

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Evidence-based guidelines on the therapeutic use of repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS): An update (2014–2018)

TL;DR: These updated recommendations take into account all rTMS publications, including data prior to 2014, as well as currently reviewed literature until the end of 2018, and are based on the differences reached in therapeutic efficacy of real vs. sham rT MS protocols.
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Human corticospinal excitability evaluated with transcranial magnetic stimulation during different reaction time paradigms.

TL;DR: The timing of the corticospinal rise in excitability on the side of movement was independent of task difficulty and RT, which suggests that cortiospinal activation is, to some extent, in series and not in parallel with stimulus processing and response selection.
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Event-related coherence and event-related desynchronization/synchronization in the 10 Hz and 20 Hz EEG during self-paced movements

TL;DR: Findings implicate the frontal lobes in control of movement planning and execution and the involvement of different frequency bands with different timings may represent parallel changes in the cortical network.
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Task-related coherence and task-related spectral power changes during sequential finger movements

TL;DR: The present results indicate an active intercommunication between bilateral and mesial central and prefrontal regions which becomes more intense with more complex sequential movements.
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Sustained Activation of mTOR Pathway in Embryonic Neural Stem Cells Leads to Development of Tuberous Sclerosis Complex-Associated Lesions

TL;DR: Removing Tsc1 in Emx1-expressing embryonic telencephalic neural stem cells (NSCs) and finding that mutant mice faithfully recapitulated TSC neuropathological lesions found that finely tuned mTOR activation in embryonic NSCs may be critical to prevent development of TSC-associated brain lesions.