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Oili Salonen

Researcher at University of Helsinki

Publications -  178
Citations -  12142

Oili Salonen is an academic researcher from University of Helsinki. The author has contributed to research in topics: Stroke & Magnetic resonance imaging. The author has an hindex of 62, co-authored 178 publications receiving 11403 citations. Previous affiliations of Oili Salonen include Helsinki University Central Hospital.

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Functional Organization of the Human First and Second Somatosensory Cortices: a Neuromagnetic Study

TL;DR: Multichannel neuromagnetic recordings were used to differentiate signals from the human first (SI) and second (SII) somatosensory cortices and to define representations of body surface in them.
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Impaired visual word processing in dyslexia revealed with magnetoencephalography.

TL;DR: A striking difference was found in the left inferior temporo‐occipital region where intracranial recordings have recently identified word‐specific responses within 200 msec after stimulus onset: controls showed a sharp activation at about 180 msec after word presentation, whereas dyslexics failed to activate this area entirely, or showed a slowly increasing late response.
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Signal-space projections of MEG data characterize both distributed and well-localized neuronal sources

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that SSP is particularly useful for the description of multiple sources of distributed activity and for the comparison of the strengths of specific neuronal sources under a variety of different paradigms or subject conditions.
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Viral meningoencephalitis: a review of diagnostic methods and guidelines for management.

TL;DR: The prognosis depends mainly on the pathogen and host immunologic state and the correct immediate diagnosis and introduction of symptomatic and specific therapy.
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Adverse long-term effects of brain radiotherapy in adult low-grade glioma patients.

TL;DR: In adults with low-grade glioma, postoperative radiotherapy poses a significant risk of long-term leukoencephalopathy and cognitive impairment, and postoperative irradiation performed significantly worse than the group that did not in cognitive tests.