Timothy Markman, M.D.
Affiliations: | 2006-2010 | Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, United States | |
2010-2017 | Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, United States | ||
2017- | University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, United States |
Area:
NeuromodulationGoogle:
"Timothy Markman"Mean distance: 53433 (cluster 6) | S | N | B | C | P |
Parents
Sign in to add mentorAntoniu L. Fantana | research assistant | Harvard | |
Bence P. Olveczky | research assistant | Harvard | |
Chang-Chia Liu | grad student | Johns Hopkins Medical School | |
Frederick A. Lenz | post-doc | Johns Hopkins Medical School | |
Roy Hoshi Hamilton | research scientist | Penn | |
Brian M. Salzberg | research scientist | Penn |
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. |
Markman TM, Pothineni NVK, Zghaib T, et al. (2022) Effect of Transcutaneous Magnetic Stimulation in Patients With Ventricular Tachycardia Storm: A Randomized Clinical Trial. Jama Cardiology |
Markman TM, Hamilton RH, Marchlinski FE, et al. (2020) Case Series of Transcutaneous Magnetic Stimulation for Ventricular Tachycardia Storm. Jama |
Kawai R, Markman T, Poddar R, et al. (2015) Motor cortex is required for learning but not for executing a motor skill. Neuron. 86: 800-12 |
Chien JH, Liu CC, Kim JH, et al. (2014) Painful cutaneous laser stimuli induce event-related oscillatory EEG activities that are different from those induced by nonpainful electrical stimuli. Journal of Neurophysiology. 112: 824-33 |
Markman T, Liu CC, Chien JH, et al. (2013) EEG analysis reveals widespread directed functional interactions related to a painful cutaneous laser stimulus. Journal of Neurophysiology. 110: 2440-9 |
Markman TM, Liu CC, Zhang JC, et al. (2013) Thalamic Burst Firing in Response to Experimental Pain Stimuli and in Patients with Chronic Neuropathic Pain may be a Carrier for Pain-Related Signals Chronic Pain and Brain Abnormalities. 41-60 |