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Markus Junghoefer

Researcher at University of Münster

Publications -  12
Citations -  198

Markus Junghoefer is an academic researcher from University of Münster. The author has contributed to research in topics: Tinnitus & CTBS. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 11 publications receiving 127 citations.

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Sensitivity of beamformer source analysis to deficiencies in forward modeling.

TL;DR: A systematic study on the influence of improper volume conductor modeling on the source reconstruction performance of an EEG‐data based synthetic aperture magnetometry (SAM) beamforming approach concludes that depending on source position, sensor coverage, and accuracy of the volume conductor model, localization errors up to several centimeters must be expected.
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Inhibition-induced plasticity in tinnitus patients after repetitive exposure to tailor-made notched music.

TL;DR: This study extends previous work on inhibition-induced plasticity, as it demonstrates the involvement of parietal and frontal areas and discovers a cumulative effect of cortical reorganization in tinnitus patients.
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How the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex controls affective processing in absence of visual awareness: Insights From a combined EEG-rTMS study

TL;DR: This study reveals the first available evidence for a differential influence of rDLPFC inhibition on subliminal versus supraliminal neural emotion processing, and suggests that this differential frontal activity likely reflects enhanced awareness-dependent down-regulation of negative scene processing, eventually leading to facilitated disengagement from and less negative and aroused evaluations of negative suprAliminal stimuli.
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The causal role of prefrontal hemispheric asymmetry in valence processing of words - Insights from a combined cTBS-MEG study.

TL;DR: Results provide direct evidence that bottom‐up valence processing is influenced by prefrontal hemispheric asymmetry, which controls valence‐specific MEG correlates of emotional attention.
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Enhancing Inhibition-Induced Plasticity in Tinnitus – Spectral Energy Contrasts in Tailor-Made Notched Music Matter

TL;DR: Overall, inhibition of tinnitus related neural activity could be strengthened in people affected with tinnitis by increasing spectral energy contrast in TMNM, confirming the concepts of inhibition-induced plasticity via TMNM and spectral energy contrasts.