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Meltem Izzetoglu

Researcher at Villanova University

Publications -  128
Citations -  4556

Meltem Izzetoglu is an academic researcher from Villanova University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Functional near-infrared spectroscopy & Prefrontal cortex. The author has an hindex of 30, co-authored 117 publications receiving 3800 citations. Previous affiliations of Meltem Izzetoglu include Drexel University & Middle East Technical University.

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Functional near-infrared spectroscopy

TL;DR: An emerging neuroimaging technology, functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRs), which has several attributes that make it possible to conduct neuroim imaging studies of the cortex in clinical offices and under more realistic, ecologically valid parameters.
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fNIRS Study of Walking and Walking While Talking in Young and Old Individuals

TL;DR: This study provided the first evidence that oxygenation levels are increased in the PFC during WWT compared with NW in young and old individuals, and was modified by age suggesting that older adults may under-utilize the P FC in attention-demanding locomotion tasks.
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Neuroimaging of Mobility in Aging: A Targeted Review

TL;DR: A targeted review of neuroimaging studies of mobility in aging shows that activation patterns in the cerebellum, basal ganglia, parietal and frontal cortices were related to mobility.
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Functional near-infrared neuroimaging

TL;DR: Recent findings indicate that fNIR can effectively monitor cognitive tasks such as attention, working memory, target categorization, and problem solving, and compare favorably with functional magnetic resonance imaging studies, and with the blood oxygenation level dependent signal.
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Using MazeSuite and Functional Near Infrared Spectroscopy to Study Learning in Spatial Navigation

TL;DR: The goal here is to illustrate the experimental protocol design process and the use of MazeSuite, and to demonstrate the setup and deployment of the fNIR brain activity monitoring system using Cognitive Optical Brain Imaging (COBI) Studio software.