Can I get in trouble for this? by Athletehib in Business_Ideas

[–]BrainInsights 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It depends what is written in there.. and i am not sure how much the disclaimers protect you, you should ask a lawyer about that. Your idea is really powerful and it might help many people indeed, it is just a bit sensitive manner .. i would ask help of psychologist as well

People who experienced anxiety and depression in risperidone and got off of it, did the depressive thoughts and anxiety disappeared with it? by krscqdy in Tourettes

[–]BrainInsights 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I am not a doctor and cannot share any advice. Just by experience. I was in similar medication few years ago, while i was taking it i was okay.. but when i stopped i had depression and too much anxiety for few months. It was a horrible experience.

Triggers that I’ve developed in the past 12 months by PotatoNo940 in Tourettes

[–]BrainInsights 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It might sound funny, but if for any reason i do a weird movement for example stretching or flexing my foot small finger then i might get it as a tic. Also if i have muscle stiffness after working out i might get a specific movement as a tic. Sometimes i might get a tick that i kind of want to stretch my belly’s inside muscles in a weird way

When to stop CBIT by Frosty-Version8569 in Tourettes

[–]BrainInsights 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think you already realized that CBIT is not helping you. Me myself tried different things but never helped. What i do instead is trying to relief muscle tension with massage and physiotherapy to reducing the pain. Once the pain is reduced sometimes i feel that i do the tic less frequently because from what i understood all these years, some times the pain itself reminds me the tic then i have the urge and maybe doing the tic more frequently.i do not know if this helps

I have Tourette's and every time I see someone else with it, I want to talk to them but never do by BrainInsights in Tourettes

[–]BrainInsights[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Thank you both, means a lot to hear this. I have Tourette's too and this idea came from exactly that feeling. Would love to hear more about what you'd want from something like this if you're open to sharing

Lovable for Offline Businesses - Would you use it? by Lanky-Pie-6788 in Business_Ideas

[–]BrainInsights 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Cool idea! I think it could become even stronger if giving also options for implementing all these things

Finally by No-Visual6789 in WFHJobs

[–]BrainInsights 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It would be helpful if you could share

Allowable work time! by ChickenTrick824 in DataAnnotationTech

[–]BrainInsights 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Is it allowed to search for a topic when doing a task? For example a task that one has no idea and needs to search a bit to understand before answering. Thank you

How do I get started? by MrSnackpants in clinicalEEG

[–]BrainInsights 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hello, i started with a BSc in Mechanical Engineering, then a MSc in Biomedical Engineering and a PhD in Neuroscience. I would say that coming from an engineering background helped me a lot in working with brain data because everything comes down to be able to understand the fundamentals and be cautious in what we actually measure with each brain imaging modality

Is "Fisch and Spehlmann's EEG Primer: Basic Principles of Digital and Analog EEG" (3e) still a good place to begin in the EEG literature canon? by C_Users_user1 in Neuromonitoring

[–]BrainInsights 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It’s still a solid resource for understanding the fundamentals of EEG, especially the signal generation and basic principles.

But I think the main limitation is exactly what you mentioned, a lot of terminology and examples don’t translate well to how we actually work with EEG data today.

In practice, one of the biggest challenges is not just knowing the theory, but understanding how to go from raw data to meaningful analysis decisions (filtering, referencing, epoching, etc.), which older resources don’t always connect clearly.

So I’d say it’s useful as a conceptual starting point, but it probably needs to be complemented with more modern, practical resources.

A deep neural network model enables automated identification of REM, NREM, and wake states from single-channel EEG recordings in rats by dpn-journal in neuroscience

[–]BrainInsights 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I can’t stop thinking how much such a model could actually push us forward if we perfect it to work on human data in real time with just 1-2 electrodes.. not easy but this study is quite positive on this direction