Increasing Synchronization through Multi-Tasking
In the eye-tracking study, healthy subjects who were asked to remember five words while tracking the target showed increased synchronization and performance improvement, while brain-injured subjects given the same task did not improve. Bahar hopes that these projects will lead to the development of new techniques for measuring brain injury on the battlefield.
If you use it wisely, and you have a very gifted student to help with your research, the money from the Board grant really helps.
The Physics of Seizures
Sonya Bahar
Associate Professor, Biophysics
UM St. Louis
More Interview Clips
Related Links
- Bahar’s Departmental Website

- The Center for Neurodynamics

- Journal of Biological Physics, co-edited by Bahar

- “The Biological Physicist,” newsletter edited by Bahar

- “Intrinsic Optical Signal Imaging of Neocortical Seizures: The 'Epileptic Dip,’” by Bahar

- Chapter by Bahar in Bioimaging in Neurodegeneration

- Collaboration on the Eye-tracking Study
