Assistant Professor
Department of Biomedical Engineering
Herbert Wertheim College of Engineering
Department of Neurology
College of Medicine
Dr. Gunduz’s research is focused on finding precursors to behavior and aftereffects of stimulation in neural networks through electrophysiology and bioimaging. Her lab aims to translate this knowledge into clinical diagnostic and therapeutic systems to improve quality of life of those suffering from neurological disorders. To this end, Dr. Gunduz works with many clinical populations, such as neurosurgical patients with epilepsy and movement disorders (Tourette’s syndrome, Parkinson’s Disease), as well as stroke patients undergoing neurorehabilitation.
Publications:
- F. Lotte, J.S. Brumberg, P. Brunner, A. Gunduz, A.L. Ritaccio, C. Guan, G. Schalk, “Electrocorticographic Representations of Segmental Features in Continuous Speech,” Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, art. 97, 2015.
- A. Gunduz, H.Morita , P.J. Rossi et al., “Proceedings of the Second Annual Deep Brain Stimulation Think Tank: What’s in the Pipeline,” International Journal of Neuroscience, 19:1-31, 2014.
- J. Kubanek, P. Brunner, A. Gunduz, D. Poeppel, G. Schalk, “The tracking of speech envelope in the human cortex,” PLoS One, 8(1): e53398, 2013.
- C.M. Potes*, A. Gunduz*, P. Brunner, G. Schalk, “Dynamics of electrocorticographic (ECoG) activity in human temporal and frontal cortical areas during music listening”, NeuroImage, 61(4): 841-8, 2012. *Co-first authors.
- A. Gunduz, P. Brunner, A.L. Ritaccio, E.C. Leuthardt, B. Pesaran, G. Schalk, “Decoding covert spatial attention using electrocorticographic (ECoG) signals in humans,” NeuroImage, 60(4): 2285-93, 2012.
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