Gabriel Curio
Humboldt University of Berlin
15 Papers
204 Citations
Gabriel Curio is an academic researcher from Humboldt University of Berlin. The author has contributed to research in topics: Capacitive sensing & Electromagnetic shielding. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 15 publications. Previous affiliations of Gabriel Curio include Charité & Braunschweig University of Technology.
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Papers
Patent
Sensor system and methods for the capacitive measurement of electromagnetic signals having a biological origin
Klaus-Robert Müller,Benjamin Blankertz,Gabriel Curio,Meinhard Schilling +3 more
- 23 Dec 2005
TL;DR: In this paper, the changes in the electrode capacity of the capacitive sensor system are determined with the aid of several methods which particularly use the inventive sensor system in order to take said changes into account when the test signals are evaluated.
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Single Trial Detection of EEG Error Potentials: A Tool for Increasing BCI Transmission Rates
Benjamin Blankertz,Christin Schäfer,Guido Dornhege,Gabriel Curio +3 more
- 28 Aug 2002
TL;DR: This paper presents a pattern recognition approach that allows for a robust single trial detection of this error potential from multichannel EEG signals and designs classifiers that are capable of bounding false positives (FP), which would classify correct responses as errors.
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ECoG high gamma activity reveals distinct cortical representations of lyrics passages, harmonic and timbre-related changes in a rock song
TL;DR: An in-depth analysis of two electrocorticographic data sets obtained over the left hemisphere in ten patients during presentation of either a rock song or a read-out narrative suggests a context-dependent feature selection in the processing of complex auditory stimuli.
Multi-Variate EEG Analysis as a Novel Tool to Examine Brain Responses to Naturalistic Music Stimuli
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that a significant CACor can be detected in an individual listener's EEG of a single presentation of a full-length complex naturalistic music stimulus, and it co-varies with the stimuli’s average magnitudes of sharpness, spectral centroid, and rhythmic complexity.
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No somatotopy of sensorimotor alpha-oscillation responses to differential finger stimulation.
Birgit Nierula,Friederike U. Hohlefeld,Gabriel Curio,Gabriel Curio,Vadim V. Nikulin,Vadim V. Nikulin +5 more
TL;DR: These findings might reflect anatomical constraints on the sequential temporal activation of fingers' skin where almost simultaneous activation of many fingers usually occurs in everyday activities, such as grasping or holding objects.
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