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Steven L. Bressler

Researcher at Center for Complex Systems and Brain Sciences

Publications -  138
Citations -  15420

Steven L. Bressler is an academic researcher from Center for Complex Systems and Brain Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Visual cortex & Granger causality. The author has an hindex of 55, co-authored 136 publications receiving 14217 citations. Previous affiliations of Steven L. Bressler include Florida Atlantic University & University of California, Berkeley.

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Large-scale brain networks in cognition: emerging methods and principles

TL;DR: It is argued that the emerging science of large-scale brain networks provides a coherent framework for understanding of cognition that allows a principled exploration of how cognitive functions emerge from, and are constrained by, core structural and functional networks of the brain.
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Beta oscillations in a large-scale sensorimotor cortical network: Directional influences revealed by Granger causality

TL;DR: These results are the first, to the authors' knowledge, to demonstrate in awake monkeys that synchronized beta oscillations bind multiple sensorimotor areas into a large-scale network during motor maintenance behavior and carry Granger causal influences from primary somatosensory and inferior posterior parietal cortices to motor cortex.
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Evaluating causal relations in neural systems: granger causality, directed transfer function and statistical assessment of significance.

TL;DR: The relation between the directed transfer function (DTF) and the well-accepted Granger causality is studied, and it is shown that DTF can be interpreted within the framework of Granger causability.
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Cortical coordination dynamics and cognition.

TL;DR: An approach to understanding operational laws in cognition is proposed based on principles of coordination dynamics that are derived from a simple and experimentally verified theoretical model that support a mechanism of adaptive inter-area pattern constraint that underlies cognitive operations generally.
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Wiener-Granger causality: a well established methodology.

TL;DR: This article describes a fundamentally different approach to identifying causal connectivity in neuroscience: a focus on the predictability of ongoing activity in one part from that in another, made possible by a new method that comes from the pioneering work of Wiener (1956) and Granger (1969).