P
Peyman Adjamian
Researcher at University of Nottingham
Publications - 22
Citations - 1258
Peyman Adjamian is an academic researcher from University of Nottingham. The author has contributed to research in topics: Tinnitus & Spatial frequency. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 21 publications receiving 1130 citations. Previous affiliations of Peyman Adjamian include University of Essex & Aston University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
The mechanisms of tinnitus: perspectives from human functional neuroimaging.
TL;DR: A number of methodological issues limiting the field of human neuroimaging are considered and approaches are recommended to overcome potential inconsistency in results arising from poorly matched participants, lack of appropriate controls and low statistical power.
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Induced visual illusions and gamma oscillations in human primary visual cortex
Peyman Adjamian,Ian E. Holliday,Gareth R. Barnes,Arjan Hillebrand,Avgis Hadjipapas,Krish D. Singh +5 more
TL;DR: It is hypothesize that the intrinsic properties of gamma oscillations may underlie visual discomfort and play a role in the onset of seizures.
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Re-examining the relationship between audiometric profile and tinnitus pitch.
Magdalena Sereda,Deborah A. Hall,Daniel J. Bosnyak,Mark Edmondson-Jones,Larry E. Roberts,Peyman Adjamian,Alan R. Palmer +6 more
TL;DR: The findings concerning subjects with narrow tinnitus bandwidth suggest that this can be used as an a priori inclusion criterion and a large group of such subjects should be tested to confirm these results.
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Co-registration of magnetoencephalography with magnetic resonance imaging using bite-bar-based fiducials and surface-matching.
Peyman Adjamian,Gareth R. Barnes,Arjan Hillebrand,Ian E. Holliday,Krish D. Singh,Paul L. Furlong,E. Harrington,C W Barclay,P.J.G. Route +8 more
TL;DR: The overall accuracy of the new procedure is greatly improved compared to the previous technique and the test-retest reliability and accuracy of target localization with the new design is superior to techniques that incorporate anatomical-based fiducial points or coils placed on the circumference of the head.
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Neuromagnetic indicators of tinnitus and tinnitus masking in patients with and without hearing loss.
TL;DR: The findings partly support the thalamocortical dysrhythmia model and suggest that slow-wave (delta band) activity may be a more reliable correlate of tinnitus than high-frequency activity.