Sue Sim
Monash University
8 Papers
Sue Sim is an academic researcher from Monash University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Facial muscles & Fractal analysis. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 8 publications.
Chat about Author
Papers
Complexity-based decoding of brain-skin relation in response to olfactory stimuli.
Shafiul Omam,Mohammad Hossein Babini,Sue Sim,Rui Tee,Visvamba Nathan,Hamidreza Namazi,Hamidreza Namazi +6 more
TL;DR: It can be said that human skin reaction changes with the variations in the activity of human brain, as shown by mathematical analysis of Galvanic Skin Response and Electroencephalography signals.
46
Complexity-Based Analysis of the Relation between Human Muscle Reaction and Walking Path
TL;DR: This research analyzes how leg muscles react when the authors walk in different conditions (such as different speeds and paths) and finds that leg muscles act as a “spatially aggregating force” during walking.
34
Analysis of brain‐facial muscle connection in the static fractal visual stimulation
Mirra Soundirarajan,Mohammad Hossein Babini,Sue Sim,Visvamba Nathan,Abdulhamit Subasi,Hamidreza Namazi +5 more
TL;DR: The findings indicate that the alteration of EMG signals' complexity was significant (P value = .0001) and more significant alterations in the EMG and EEG signals' complexities in response to the stimuli with higher complexities were observed.
19
Information-based analysis of the relationship between brain and facial muscle activities in response to static visual stimuli.
TL;DR: This research investigates how facial muscle reaction is related to the reaction of the human brain and results indicate that the visual stimuli with greater information content have a greater effect on the variation of the information content of both EEG and EMG signals.
18
Decoding of the coupling between brain and skin activities in olfactory stimulation by analysis of EEG and GSR signals
Shafiul Omam,Mohammad Hossein Babini,Sue Sim,Rui Tee,Visvamba Nathan,Soheil Gohari,Colin Burvill,Kamil Kuca,Kamil Kuca,Ondrej Krejcar,Ondrej Krejcar,Hamidreza Namazi,Hamidreza Namazi +12 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors evaluated the relationship between brain and skin activities and found that a relationship exists between brain activity and skin activity, since all parts of the human body are controlled by the brain.