Submit a Comment: State of Pain

Please use the form below to submit comments. Also provide an e-mail address and name. Your e-mail address and/or name will be used only to communicate with you about this or future comments you may submit. I am particularly keen to receive references to published material that contradicts the assertions and arguments I have made.

Your name
Your e-mail address
Comment

By submitting the above comment, I grant to Ross Alan Hangartner the right to incorporate the comment in full or in part, literally, paraphrased, or conceptually, as he sees fit, into State of Pain or other writings that he may create in the future. However, I don't grant permission to include my name or e-mail address, or to use them in any other way than to contact me for follow-up. I understand that by submitting the comment I acquire no right of any kind in State of Pain or other writings of Ross Alan Hangartner.


EEG and MEG


This page is incomplete. It displays memoes and/or notes.

Meta description

The capabilities and limitations of EEG (electro-encephalograms) and MEG (magneto-enchephalograms).

Note Text: 1978 EEG needed to match speed of brain

[EEG] is the only relatively inexpensive and noninvasive technique that can monitor the ongoing neurodynamics of the human brain at speeds that parallel mental activities.

Panksepp, Jaak, "Affective Neuroscience: The Foundations of Human and Animal Emotions", Oxford University Press, 1998, 85

End of included memoes/notes