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2006-08-12 00:40:28 · 2 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Medicine

2 answers

(1)
Yes yes definitely..
what about him? got any deggree about it in Greece?
I don't think so

2006-08-12 01:03:11 · answer #1 · answered by Roland 6 · 0 0

COSTAS N. CHRISTAKOS

Titles/Positions:

Associate Professor of Physiology in the Department of Basic Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of Crete. Member of the Computational Neuroscience Group of the Institute of Applied and Computational Mathematics, Foundation for Research and Technology - Hellas. Studies: Degree in Mechanical-Electrical Engineering, National Technical University of Athens; MPhil and PhD degree in Physiology, King's College, University of London. Positions: 1) Assistant, Institute of Physiology (Division of Neurophysiology), Medical School, University of Goettingen, Germany (1980-1986). 2) Visiting Professor, Department of Physiology, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New York (1986-1995). 3), Visiting Professor, Center for Neurobiology and Behavior, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University, New York (1989-1995). 4) Associate Professor of Physiology, Medical School, University of Crete (1989 -).

Research Interests:

Study of neural population activities, with emphasis on analysis of rhythms and population synchrony and application to neural mechanisms of movement and respiration. 1) Neural control of muscle contractions in posture and movement. 2) Generation of physiological and pathological muscle tremors in steady and time-varying vontractions. 3) High-frequency oscillations characteristic of the neural networks of the respiratory rhythm generator. The methodological approach combines electrophysiological experiments, mathematical/computer modeling, and development of techniques of analysis of neural signals and systems.

Five Selected Publications:

1) C.N. Christakos. Modeling aggregate rhythms in neural populations; the stochastic approach. Trends in Biological Cybernetics 1, 271, 1990.

2) W.-X. Huang, C.N. Christakos, M.I. Cohen, Q. He. Possible network interactions indicated by bilaterally coherent rhythms in expiratory reccurent laryngeal nerve discharges. Journal of Neurophysiology 70, 2192, 1993.

3) C.N. Christakos: On the detection and measurement of synchrony in neural populations by coherence analysis. Journal of Neurophysiology 78, 3453, 1997.

4) S. Erimaki, C.N. Christakos: Occurrence of widespread motor unit firing correlations in muscle contractions; their role in the generation of tremor and time-varying voluntary force. Journal of Neurophysiology 82, 2839, 1999.

5) C.N. Christakos, S. Erimaki: Components of physiological tremor in static and dynamic muscle contractions. European Journal of Neuroscience, 12, 149, 2000.

2006-08-12 09:20:39 · answer #2 · answered by skyeblue 5 · 0 0

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