Neuromodec
On-Demand

A collection of resources from past events and webinars hosted by Neuromodec. On-Demand content lives on Neuromodec Connect—our platform for sharing updates, collaborating, and attending free webinars for professionals, academics, and clinicians in Neuromodulation, Brain Stimulation, and Neurotechnology.

2024 Webinar Series Recordings

Re-watch webinars from the 2024 Neuromodec Webinar Series featuring leading experts discussing the latest trends and innovations in neuromodulation.

Neuromodulation as a Fatigue and Workload Countermeasure: Perceptions, Performance, and Ethics Dilemma

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Direct to Consumer Brain Implants: Technical Considerations, Ethical Concerns

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Bringing Neuromodulation to the Advocacy Table

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Advances in Neuromodulation in the Study of Language and Treatment of Aphasia

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Machine learning in non-invasive electromagnetic brain stimulation

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Uncrossed Pathway Physiology in Neurologic Injuries

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Neurostimulation + Neuroimaging and Neurofeedback in the Wild: New vistas for Neuroergonomics

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BCI – The Real Experience in the Words of Real Users

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Neuromodec Webinar Series on Computational Modeling

Recordings coming soon

Neurocomputational Insights: Exploring Neural-Level Seizure Generation with Arbor-TVB Co-simulator and Intervention Strategies in Whole-Brain Network

Thursday, August 21, 2025 | 11 AM – 12 PM (ET)

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Large-scale dynamics of distinct excitatory cell types in awake animals

Thursday, August 7, 2025 | 11 AM – 12 PM (ET)

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Computational modeling of electrotactile feedback through Comsol-Neuron combined method

Thursday, July 24, 2025 | 11 AM – 12 PM (ET)

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Preliminary Results on Modeling Brain Stimulation Fields in Synaptic Clefts

Thursday, July 10, 2025 | 11 AM – 12 PM (ET)

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Modeling Neuropathy

Thursday, June 26, 2025 | 11 AM – 12 PM (ET)

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Modeling Non-invasive Brain Stimulation – with focus on TMS

Thursday, May 29, 2025 | 11 AM – 12 PM (ET)

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Modeling tDCS and TMS

Thursday, May 15, 2025 | 11 AM – 12 PM (ET)

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Modeling Coordinated Reset Neuromodulation for PD

Thursday, May 1, 2025 | 11:30 AM – 12:30 PM (ET)

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Modeling Epilepsy and Schizophrenia

Thursday, April 17, 2025 | 11 AM – 12 PM (ET)

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Digital Twins for Spinal Cord Stimulation

Thursday, April 3, 2025 | 11 AM – 12 PM (ET)

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Organic Neuromorphic Biointerfaces

Thursday, September 4, 2025 | 11 AM – 12 PM (ET)

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2024 NYC Neuromodulation Conference
Recorded Sessions

Watch lectures from the 2024 NYC Neuromodulation — expert presentations on state-of-the-art brain stimulation techniques and clinical applications.

Space, frequency, and phase: Personalized transcranial alternating-current stimulation

Robert Reinhart — Boston University

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Multimodal synchronization of transcranial electric and magnetic stimulation for targeting neuro-oscillatory activity

Asif Jamil — Harvard University

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Direct brain stimulation modulates encoding states and memory performance in humans

Youssef Ezzyat — Wesleyan University

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Precision transcranial magnetic stimulation (Part Two): Quantifying targeting and exploring the relationship between rTMS response and the inhibitory system in depression

Elisa Kallioniemi — New Jersey Institute of Technology

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Sensing-enabled and multi-target deep brain stimulation for epilepsy

Robert Gross — Emory University

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Disruption of neural periodicity predicts clinical response after deep brain stimulation for obsessive-compulsive disorder

Nicole Provenza — Baylor University

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Miniature battery-free implanted neuro-stimulators

Jacob Robinson — Motif

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Endovascular brain-computer interface

Riki Banerjee — Synchron

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Wearable disposable electrotherapy

Mohamad Fallahrad — City College of New York

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Frequency-specific effects of transcranial alternating current stimulation are explained by network dynamics

Alexander Opitz — University of Minnesota

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Biophysics of temporal interference stimulation

Scott Lempka — University of Michigan

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Long-lasting memory improvements in older adults using repetitive high-definition tACS

Robert Reinhart — Boston University

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Targeted enhancement of hippocampal networks and associative memory

Molly Hermiller — Florida State University

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Non-invasive temporal interference of the human hippocampus: insights from different brain states

Ines Violante — University of Surrey

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Cognitive and neuronal effects of transcranial electrical stimulation in older adults

Daria Antonenko — University of Greifswald

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