Ecological decoding of visual aesthetic preference with oscillatory electroencephalogram features—A mini-review

M Welter, F Lotte - Frontiers in Neuroergonomics, 2024 - frontiersin.org
In today's digital information age, human exposure to visual artifacts has reached an
unprecedented quasi-omnipresence. Some of these cultural artifacts are elevated to the …

EEG-based investigation of the impact of classroom design on cognitive performance of students

JG Cruz-Garza, M Darfler, JD Rounds, E Gao… - arxiv preprint arxiv …, 2021 - arxiv.org
This study investigated the neural dynamics associated with short-term exposure to different
virtual classroom designs with different window placement and room dimension. Participants …

Your brain on art: a new paradigm to study artistic creativity based on the 'exquisite corpse'using mobile brain-body imaging

JG Cruz-Garza, G Chatufale, D Robleto… - Brain Art: Brain …, 2019 - Springer
We propose a novel experimental paradigm to investigate the human creative process in
artistic expression using mobile brain-body imaging (MoBI) technology, which allows the …

Quantifying signal quality from unimodal and multimodal sources: application to EEG with ocular and motion artifacts

DO Nahmias, KL Kontson - Frontiers in Neuroscience, 2021 - frontiersin.org
With prevalence of electrophysiological data collected outside of the laboratory from
portable, non-invasive modalities growing at a rapid rate, the quality of these recorded data …

[PDF][PDF] Your Brain on Art: A New Paradigm to Study Artistic Creativity Based on the 'Exquisite Corpse'Using Mobile Brain-Body Imaging

G Chatufale, D Robleto - researchgate.net
We propose a novel experimental paradigm to investigate the human creative process in
artistic expression using mobile brain-body imaging (MoBI) technology, which allows the …

Unknown and Solitary Seas: Angelo Mosso's Nineteenth-Century Discovery of Imaging Dreams Through the Cerebral Pulse

D Robleto - Mobile Brain-Body Imaging and the Neuroscience of …, 2019 - Springer
In the 1870s, Italian physiologist Angelo Mosso developed devices that would eventually
usher in modern-day neuroimaging, but it is the little-explored experiments he did with a …