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- Bookvolume editor, Nick F. Ramsey, Jose del R. Millan.Contents:
1. Human brain function and brain-computer interfaces
2. Brain-computer interfaces: definitions and principles
3. Stroke and potential benefits of brain to computer interface
4. Brain-computer interfaces for people with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
5. Brain damage by trauma
6. Spinal cord lesions
7. Brain:computer interfaces for communication
8. Applications of brain-computer interfaces to the control of robotic and prosthetic arms
9. BCI for rehab ('not control')
10. Video games as rich environments to foster brain plasticity
11. Consciousness and communication brain-computer interfaces in severely brain-injured patients
12. Smart neuromodulation in movement disorders
13. Bidirectional brain computer interfaces
14. Brain-computer interfaces and virtual reality for neurorehabilitation
15. Monitoring performance of professional and occupational operators
16. Self-Health Monitoring and wearable neurotechnologies
17. Brain-computer interfaces for basic neuroscience
18. Electroencephalography
19. iEEG: dura-lining electrodes
20. Local field potentials for BCI control
21. Real-time fMRI for brain-computer interfacing
22. Merging brain-computer interface and functional electrical stimulation technologies for movement restoration
23. General principles of machine learning for brain-computer interfacing
24. Ethics and the emergence of brain-computer interface medicine
25. Industrial perspectives on brain-computer interface technology
26. Hearing the needs of clinical users.Digital Access ScienceDirect 2020 - ArticleWindorfer A, Gasteiger U.Klin Padiatr. 1978 May;190(3):219-25.Depending on their physiochemical properties, foreign substances appear to a more or less substantial degree in mother's milk. The decision as to whether a drug may be administered during nursing is particularly difficult in the case of antibiotics. Due to the development of resistance and sensitization only a few of these drugs are allowed. A nursing stop should only be ordered when a dangerous drug is used with genuine indication and without a possible alternative. As a rule, those drugs which are believed to involve a certain danger for newborn, can be replaced by other nonhazardous drugs.