Program
Day 1
Axel Thielscher - Concurrent TMS-fMRI: Why is it still annoying to use?
Samuel Goldstein - 3D-printed stand, timing interface, and coil localization tools for concurrent TMS-fMRI experiments
Til Ole Bergmann - Concurrent TMS-fMRI for causal network perturbation and proof of target engagement
Molly Hermiller - Hippocampal-cortical network-targeted TBS during concurrent fMRI
Christian Windischberger - Technical innovations in TMS-fMRI
Day 2
Desmond Oathes - FMRI guided pathways to subcortical targets validated with interleaved TMS/fMRI
Katie Dunlop - A Comparison of 10 Hz and Theta Burst Stimulation using Concurrent Left DLPFC-TMS/fMRI.
Catriona Scrivener - Optimal parameters for interslice stimulation in concurrent TMS-fMRI
Mohsen Mosayebi-Samani - Transferability of neurophysiological effects of rTMS from Motor to Prefrontal cortex
13:30-14:45
Alexander Sack - Oscillatory state dependent TMS induced network effects.
Shanice Janssens - Assessing TMS-evoked cognitive network responses depending on neurocognitive and oscillatory brain state: a simultaneous TMS-EEG-fMRI project
15:15-18:30
Day 3
Alexandra Woolgar - Understanding TMS-fMRI results through the lens of a plastic attractor network model: the role of right DLPFC in selective attention
Catriona Scrivener - Is the right intraparietal sulcus critical for driving brain-wide focus on task-relevant information?
Maria Vasileiadi - Stimulating language: mapping local and network effects of TMS on the superior temporal gyrus
Lysianne Beynel - Combining connectivity-based rTMS and fMRI during the presentation of aversive stimuli to modulate amygdala activation: can we disentangle the actual effects of rTMS from the ancillary effects of rTMS?