Matthew R. Krause
Affiliations: | McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada |
Area:
VisionGoogle:
"Matthew Krause"Mean distance: 13.62 (cluster 17) | S | N | B | C | P |
Parents
Sign in to add mentorJames A. Mazer | grad student | 2005-2012 | Yale | |
(Cortical Circuits for Vision and Visual Perception.) | ||||
Daniel Guitton | post-doc | Montreal Neurological Institute | ||
Christopher C. Pack | post-doc | McGill |
BETA: Related publications
See more...
Publications
You can help our author matching system! If you notice any publications incorrectly attributed to this author, please sign in and mark matches as correct or incorrect. |
Vieira PG, Krause MR, Pack CC. (2024) Temporal interference stimulation disrupts spike timing in the primate brain. Nature Communications. 15: 4558 |
Krause MR, Pack CC. (2023) The mode is the message. Neuron. 111: 1852-1853 |
Krause MR, Vieira PG, Pack CC. (2023) Transcranial electrical stimulation: How can a simple conductor orchestrate complex brain activity? Plos Biology. 21: e3001973 |
Swindale NV, Spacek MA, Krause M, et al. (2023) Spontaneous activity in cortical neurons is stereotyped and non-Poisson. Cerebral Cortex (New York, N.Y. : 1991) |
Krause MR, Vieira PG, Thivierge JP, et al. (2022) Brain stimulation competes with ongoing oscillations for control of spike timing in the primate brain. Plos Biology. 20: e3001650 |
Csorba BA, Krause MR, Zanos TP, et al. (2022) Long-range cortical synchronization supports abrupt visual learning. Current Biology : Cb |
Nakhla N, Korkian Y, Krause MR, et al. (2020) Neural selectivity for visual motion in macaque area V3A. Eneuro |
Vieira PG, Krause MR, Pack CC. (2020) tACS entrains neural activity while somatosensory input is blocked. Plos Biology. 18: e3000834 |
Krause MR, Vieira PG, Csorba BA, et al. (2019) Reply to Khatoun et al.: Speculation about brain stimulation must be constrained by observation. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America |
Krause MR, Vieira PG, Csorba BA, et al. (2019) Transcranial alternating current stimulation entrains single-neuron activity in the primate brain. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America |