Yokohama, Japan will host the 16th annual World Congress on Pain by International Association of the Study of Pain (IASP) on Sep. 26.
Our Partners Medoc be there in our booth (#660), come and say hello
For registering – enter the IASP site.
Yokohama, Japan will host the 16th annual World Congress on Pain by International Association of the Study of Pain (IASP) on Sep. 26.
Our Partners Medoc be there in our booth (#660), come and say hello
For registering – enter the IASP site.
We are excited to be attending the 36th Annual Scientific Meeting
For more information Click Here

This Symposium and workshop aim to provide theoretical and practical training about deriving EEG in the MR environment, and to offer ideas about how concurrent EEG-fMRI can be used to answer scientific and clinical questions.
Organisers: Bryan Paton (University of Newcastle), Vinh Nguyen (QIMR Berghofer), Agnieszka Iwasiw (Symbiotic Devices AUST & NZ) and Brain Products GmbH, Germany
EEG-fMRI Symposium
Speakers
Dr. Nguyen was awarded a PhD degree of Computational Neuroscience at Queensland Brain Institute, The University of Queensland in 2014 under the supervision of A. Prof Ross Cunnington and Prof. Michael Breakspear. The PhD project examined neural responses across modalities with a focus on the integration of EEG and fMRI to inform brain functions of 1) the visual system during face perception, and 2) the motor system during the preparation of voluntary actions.
Dr. Nguyen is currently a postdoc research scientist in the System Neuroscience Group at QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute working under the lab of Dr. Christine Guo. His recent work involves the use of neuroimaging and physiological recordings to study brain functions during naturalistic experiment paradigms (i.e. movie and music viewing), and the breakdown of those brain functions in patients with mental illnesses.
Suresh completed his PhD in psychology at the University of Auckland in 2005 after which he joined the newly established Cardiff University Brain Research Imaging Centre as a post-doctoral fellow. In 2014 Suresh received a Rutherford Discovery Fellowship and has returned to Auckland where he works in both the School of Pharmacy (Medicine) and School of Psychology (Science). Suresh’s main research interests are in understanding how drugs alter brain activity and in developing methodologies to measure these changes in both healthy individuals and patient groups. His studies have involved a range of compounds including hallucinogens (ketamine, LSD, psilocybin), anaesthetics (propofol, dexmedetomidine), anti-epileptics (vigabatrin, perampanel, tiagabine) and GABA-enhancers (benzodiazepines, zolpidem, gaboxadol). Suresh’s research has used a wide-range of neuroimaging techniques including magnetoencephalography, electroencephalography, functional magnetic resonance imaging and magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Since returning to Auckland his research group have been using simultaneous EEG/fMRI to measure drug action in the brain.
Aaron is currently a third year PhD student in the Department of Medicine (Austin Health)/Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health at the University of Melbourne, under the supervision of Dr John Archer, Dr David Abbott, and Prof Graeme Jackson. His PhD focuses on applying EEG-fMRI techniques to identify markers of neural network dysfunction in children with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome, a severe epilepsy phenotype associated with intractable seizures and cognitive regression (‘epileptic encephalopathy’).
David Carmichael is an MRI Physicist who following a PhD in medical physics at UCL (2000-2004) has worked on using new combinations of imaging techniques to measure and understand the human brain across spatial and temporal scales. His main focus over the last few years has been on combined measurements of electrophysiology via EEG and functional MRI and quantitative structural MRI. In particular he has worked on technical advances such as the combination of intracranial EEG with fMRI in humans and the development of motion insensitive EEG-fMRI. He is also engaged in a program of work in the application of these methods to study of children with epilepsy who are treated at Great Ormond Street Hospital. EEG-fMRI is important in this context by allowing the non-invasive identification and characterisation of epileptogenic brain networks.
EEG-fMRI Symposium Program
When: 1pm, 20th November 2016
Location: University of Newcastle
Format 45-60 min talks
EEG-fMRI Workshop
Speakers
Nicola Soldati, PhD, Brain Products GmbH
Dr Vinh Nguyen, QIMR Berghofer
Agnieszka Iwasiw, Symbiotic Devices
For program and further information
Register Now for the ACNS EEG-fMRI Early Satellite Workshop.
For online payments please click here.
I’m pleased to share with you some updates regarding the coming IASP congress (Yokohama Japan, Sep. 26-30):For the first time, Medoc will present in an 18sqm booth size (#660ʕ), and will show the following systems:
* Q-Sense CPM
* Pathway Model CHEPS
* TSA-II
* Q-Sense
Our main focus will be our newest technologies: Pain modulation using a dual probe technology and our latest published normative data for CHEPS.
Our digital promotion will start soon, and we kindly ask you to take an active part!
* Use the IASP digital signature (pls find attached and instructions below)
* Like & share the posts on LinkedIn and Facebook
* Forward the e-blast to your data base
* Talk to attendees from your region and invite them to visit our booth and experience our latest technologies LIVE
* Tell us who will join IASP and we’ll welcome them at the booth
* Join us at the exhibition
Pre-congress promotion is important to all of us: It can maximize the traffic to our booth during the congress and it can also awake awareness today for any thoughts or unmet needs of our clients.
It is a reason to talk and to interact.
A joint effort is the best way to spread the news so stay tuned… We’ll begin in September.About the IASP:
IASP – 16th World Congress on Pain will be held in Yokohama, Japan during September 26-30, 2016.
The World Congress provides state-of-the-art learning opportunities on a wide array of topics in pain research and treatment. Thousands of the world’s leading experts and top researchers will share their thoughts,
research and findings. This year congress is expected to host over 5000 attendees worldwide.
You’re welcome to review the program attached with the sessions topics and main lecturers.For further information click here
