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Louis J. Goldberg

Researcher at State University of New York System

Publications -  5
Citations -  2325

Louis J. Goldberg is an academic researcher from State University of New York System. The author has contributed to research in topics: Braille & Research Diagnostic Criteria. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 5 publications receiving 1564 citations.

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Diagnostic Criteria for Temporomandibular Disorders (DC/TMD) for Clinical and Research Applications: recommendations of the International RDC/TMD Consortium Network* and Orofacial Pain Special Interest Group†

TL;DR: The newly recommended evidence-based new DC/TMD protocol is appropriate for use in both clinical and research settings and includes both a valid screener for detecting any pain-related TMD as well as valid diagnostic criteria for differentiating the most common pain- related TMD.
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Species-Specific Morphology of Masticatory Jaw Movements

TL;DR: A method of quantifying masticatory jaw movements so that rigorous cross-species comparisons can be made is described and it is suggested that it is possible to interpret the action pattern definition literally in that masticatories jaw movements have a quantifiable form, which contains species-specific features.
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Evidence of a time constant associated with movement patterns in six mammalian species

TL;DR: Evidence suggests that the 3 s time constant originally found in human perceptual and primate motor skills is common among many mammalian orders and probably represents the operation of an ancestral neural mechanism.
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A Biosemiotic Analysis of Braille

TL;DR: An examination of how the code that is embedded in the structure of a Braille cell is transferred with fidelity from the environment through the body and into the Braille reader’s brain is addressed.
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Short duration time constant associated with chewing in the guinea pig

TL;DR: It was found that guinea pig chewing bursts provide a convenient laboratory based model for elucidating the neuro-physiologic mechanisms of this time constant, and provides further support for the hypothesis that there is a highly conserved time constant associated with movement patterns in mammals.