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Jonathan R. Wolpaw

Contact: Jonathan R

Education: Wolpaw

Resource: Wolpaw

HonorsAuards: New York State Dept. of Health,Wadsworth Center,Albany, NY, USA

Qualification: Doctor of Medicine,M.D. head of the nerve injury and repair laboratory at Wadsworth center, Department of health, New York state, Professor of biomedicine, Department of health, New York State

Institution: Doctor of Medicine,M.D. head of the nerve injury and repair laboratory at Wadsworth center, Department of health, New York state, Professor of biomedicine, Department of health, New York State

Others

handicapped aids, brain-computer interfaces, eectroencephalography, human computer interaction, matched filters, medical control systems, medical robotics, neurophysiology, prosthetics, medical signal processing, user interfaces, bioelectric potentials, biocontrol, medical computing, medical signal detection, patient rehabilitation, reviews, autoregressive processes, bioelectric phenomena, biomechanics, biomedical electrodes, diseases, feedback, learning (artificial intelligence), muscle

PracttceAreas

handicapped aids, brain-computer interfaces, eectroencephalography, human computer interaction, matched filters, medical control systems, medical robotics, neurophysiology, prosthetics, medical signal processing, user interfaces, bioelectric potentials, biocontrol, medical computing, medical signal detection, patient rehabilitation, reviews, autoregressive processes, bioelectric phenomena, biomechanics, biomedical electrodes, diseases, feedback, learning (artificial intelligence), muscle

Bio

Jonathan R. Wolpaw received the M.D. degree from Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH.,He is Chief of the Laboratory of Neural Injury and Repair at the Wadsworth Center of the New York State Department of Health and a Professor of Biomedical Sciences at the State University of New York (SUNY), Albany. His laboratory has developed and is using operant conditioning of spinal reflexes to define the plasticity underlying learning and as a new therapeutic approach to improve walking after spinal cord injury. He is also leading the development of EEG-based brain–computer interface (BCI) technology to restore communication and control to people who are paralyzed. His group has shown that non-invasive EEG-based BCI technology can give control similar to that achieved by electrodes placed in the brain, and has begun to provide BCI systems to severely disabled people for daily use in their homes. These achievements have received wide recognition and numerous national and international awards.,Dr. Wolpaw is a member of the American Neurological Association, the American Academy of Neurology, the American Electroencephalographic Society, and the New York Academy of Sciences Society for Neuroscience. (Based on document published on 1 December 2009).

Publications

Jonathan R. Wolpaw received the M.D. degree from Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH.,He is Chief of the Laboratory of Neural Injury and Repair at the Wadsworth Center of the New York State Department of Health and a Professor of Biomedical Sciences at the State University of New York (SUNY), Albany. His laboratory has developed and is using operant conditioning of spinal reflexes to define the plasticity underlying learning and as a new therapeutic approach to improve walking after spinal cord injury. He is also leading the development of EEG-based brain–computer interface (BCI) technology to restore communication and control to people who are paralyzed. His group has shown that non-invasive EEG-based BCI technology can give control similar to that achieved by electrodes placed in the brain, and has begun to provide BCI systems to severely disabled people for daily use in their homes. These achievements have received wide recognition and numerous national and international awards.,Dr. Wolpaw is a member of the American Neurological Association, the American Academy of Neurology, the American Electroencephalographic Society, and the New York Academy of Sciences Society for Neuroscience. (Based on document published on 1 December 2009).

Publications

Jonathan R. Wolpaw received the M.D. degree from Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH.,He is Chief of the Laboratory of Neural Injury and Repair at the Wadsworth Center of the New York State Department of Health and a Professor of Biomedical Sciences at the State University of New York (SUNY), Albany. His laboratory has developed and is using operant conditioning of spinal reflexes to define the plasticity underlying learning and as a new therapeutic approach to improve walking after spinal cord injury. He is also leading the development of EEG-based brain–computer interface (BCI) technology to restore communication and control to people who are paralyzed. His group has shown that non-invasive EEG-based BCI technology can give control similar to that achieved by electrodes placed in the brain, and has begun to provide BCI systems to severely disabled people for daily use in their homes. These achievements have received wide recognition and numerous national and international awards.,Dr. Wolpaw is a member of the American Neurological Association, the American Academy of Neurology, the American Electroencephalographic Society, and the New York Academy of Sciences Society for Neuroscience. (Based on document published on 1 December 2009).