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Alexander T. Sack

Alexander T. Sack (born 9 October 1972) is a German neuroscientist and cognitive psychologist. He is currently appointed as a full professor and chair of applied cognitive neuroscience at the Faculty of Psychology and Neuroscience at Maastricht University. He is also co-founder and board member of the Dutch-Flemish Brain Stimulation Foundation, director of the International Clinical TMS Certification Course, co-director of the Center for Integrative Neuroscience (CIN) and the Scientific Director of the Transcranial Brain Stimulation Policlinic at Maastricht University Medical Centre.[1]

Alexander T. Sack
Born (1972-10-09) 9 October 1972 (age 51)
Frankfurt am Main, Germany
NationalityGerman
Occupation(s)Neuroscientist, Cognitive Psychologist, Academic and Researcher
AwardsFellow, The German Academic Scholarship Foundation
Fellow, Alzheimer Research Initiative
Fulbright Scholar
VENI-VIDI-VICI Laureate
Academic background
EducationB.Sc. in Psychology
M.Sc. in Psychology
PhD in Natural Sciences
Alma materFrankfurt University, Germany
Academic work
InstitutionsMaastricht University

Sack's research interests mainly surround brain stimulation and applied cognitive neuroscience. He specializes in noninvasive brain stimulation, fundamental and applied cognitive neuroscience, and clinical brain research.[2]

Sack was Fellow of The German Academic Scholarship Foundation and a Fellow of the Alzheimer Research Initiative. He has been a member of The Young Academy of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences (KNAW),[3] and The Young Academy of Europe (YAE).

Education edit

He studied Psychology and Neuroscience and completed his bachelor's degree in Psychology in 1995 at Johann Wolfgang Goethe University in Frankfurt am Main, where he also received his master's degree in 2000. He received his PhD in Neuroscience in 2003.[1]

Career edit

Sack was admitted to the doctoral program at Frankfurt University in 2000, supported by the Studienstiftung des Deutschen Volkes (The German Academic Scholarship Foundation). He completed his PhD in Neuroscience in 2003. He has been the Principal Investigator and Head of Research Section "Brain Stimulation and Cognition" at the Maastricht Brain Imaging Centre (M-BIC) since 2005.[4] In 2009, he was appointed chairman and program director of the international and interfaculty Research Master in Cognitive and Clinical Neuroscience at Maastricht University.[5] In 2015, he co-founded and chaired the Dutch-Flemish Brain Stimulation Foundation.[6] He served as the Head of Department of Cognitive Neuroscience at Maastricht University from 2015 to 2016, after which he was appointed as Vice Dean Research at the Faculty of Psychology and Neuroscience at Maastricht University from 2016 to 2020. Since 2017, he has also been co-director of the Center for Integrative Neuroscience (CIN) there.[7]

Sack's academic appointments at Maastricht University include his Assistant Professorship at the Department of Cognitive Neuroscience from 2005 to 2008,[8] after which he was appointed as an Associate Professor of Cognition and Brain Plasticity until 2011. Since then, he has been a Full Professor of Brain Stimulation and Applied Cognitive Neuroscience at the Faculty of Psychology and Neuroscience at Maastricht University. Apart from Maastricht University, he has been a Visiting Professor at the Department of Experimental Biomedicine and Clinical Neurosciences, Palermo University, Italy since 2015.[1]

Research edit

Sack is a pioneer and influential leader in brain stimulation and cognitive neuroscience research. He contributed to uncovering the brain dynamics underlying human cognition by combining and developing noninvasive brain imaging and brain stimulation techniques. As a principal investigator of "Brain Stimulation and Cognition” at the Maastricht Brain Imaging Centre, his research mainly focusses on the neurobiological and psychological principles underlying attention, learning, memory, and cognitive control. His scientific approach is characterized by combining various brain research techniques, including psychophysics, eye-tracking, functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI), Electroencephalography (EEG), Transcranial Brain Stimulation, especially Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) and Transcranial Electric Stimulation (TES, including TDCS and TACS). Along with his team, he spearheaded the development of simultaneously implemented TMS-fMRI-EEG during cognitive behavior allowing the application of brain-stimulation while recording the individual brain network responses (fMRI) and oscillatory brain states (EEG) of cognitively engaged participants.[1]

Multimodal brain stimulation and brain imaging edit

Sack showed that direct and precise monitoring of casual dependencies among oscillatory states and signal propagation throughout cortico-subcortical networks is enabled by concurrent TMS-EEG-fMRI which provides a promising noninvasive avenue of subject-specific network research into dynamic cognitive circuits and their dysfunction. His innovative approach enables the direct and noninvasive probing of brain-state dependent signal propagation within specific brain-wide functional networks and to study how temporal (oscillations) and spatial (brain-wide networks) coding dynamics interrelate.[9] In an earlier combined TMS-fMRI study, he applied transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) to parietal cortices during concurrent functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and while participants were executing different visuospatial tasks. The results support the idea that visuospatial deficits following parietal damage are caused by a perturbation of activity across a specific frontoparietal network with right hemispheric dominance. The research also shows that concurrent fMRI and magnetic brain stimulation during task execution allows to identify and visualize networks of brain areas that are functionally related to specific cognitive processes.[10]

In a related theoretical contribution, Sack describes different approaches of combining TMS with functional neuroimaging techniques along with shortcoming of TMS. After a critical analysis of the resulting conceptual and methodological limitations that the investigation of functional brain behavior relationships still must face, he argued that some, but not all of the methodological limitations of TMS could be overcome by combination with functional neuroimaging.[11]

Flexible cognition and neural oscillations edit

Sack proposed that oscillations underlie communication between cognitive brain regions, enabling the flexible configuration of meaningful brain networks depending on cognitive demands. He also revised the functional role of the dorsal attention network (DAN), proposing that this specific network supports a very basic cognitive mechanism, being the neural source of attentional biasing signals that enhance, maintain and reactivate representations in (especially perceptual) brain modules to enable these various cognitive processes. The DAN thus acts as a critical hub in the flexible cognitive systems of the brain, indicating its overarching role in cognition.[12]

Cognitive enhancement edit

Sack revealed that selective attention can be enhanced in healthy volunteers by applying personalized oscillatory-based transcranial brain stimulation. Sack and his team combined EEG with transcranial alternating current stimulation (EEG-tACS) to entrain the individual power (amplitude) of alpha oscillatory activity in one hemisphere of the brain. Importantly, this EEG-based tACS intervention not only significantly increased lateralized alpha oscillations as validated by EEG, but also significantly improved the ability of healthy participants to focus, detect, and discriminate stimuli in one specific hemifield, boosting selective spatial attention. The cognitive performance was significantly better as compared to no brain stimulation, showing that transcranial electric brain stimulation can lead to cognitive enhancements.

In the field of memory, Sack discovered that storing multiple items in working memory is brought about by clustering these different items along different oscillatory phases. Sack could show that this type of oscillatory sorting scheme within working memory is indeed functionally relevant for behavioral performances.[13]Sack further showed that theta and alpha phase biases near-boundary item categorization responses to one category or the other and that participants with stronger oscillatory clustering in the theta range showed a sharper discrimination performance between item categories. These findings of behaviorally-relevant functional phase-ordering represented a milestone in unravelling the behavioral relevance of so far primarily theoretical accounts of phase-coded oscillatory ordering. The repetitive nature of oscillations ensures that each item can be refreshed at its own phase and thereby maintained.[14]

Sack also decoded distributed occipito-parietal EEG signals with a linear classifier during a working memory retention interval, while using a sensory impulse stimulus to boost the read-out of distributed neural activity related to the content held in working memory. This allowed Sack and his team to reveal that the content of memorized information during retention is modulated by the phase of ongoing oscillations in the theta/alpha range, and, importantly, that memory performance is modulated by the phase at which the impulse stimulus was presented. He discovered that the intervention of presenting the impulse stimulus during phases of high memory content enhanced working memory performance in healthy volunteers. These studies of his lab show that the information held in memory is represented cyclically in posterior cortical regions and that modulation of this memory content influences memory performance. Collectively, these results represent empirical evidence in humans that working memory information is maximized within limited phase ranges, and that phase-selective stimulation can improve working memory, even in healthy young volunteers.[15]

Brain plasticity edit

In a seminal Science publication, Sack introduced a novel TMS procedure that combines the respective advantages of creating a temporary virtual lesion through rTMS with the precise chronometric study offered by event-related triple-pulse TMS.[16] This study showed that TMS-induced virtual lesions can evoke functional reorganizations, during which one part of the brain immediately compensates for activity disruptions in another brain region by taking over its specific cognitive function during task execution, revealing the highly dynamic properties of the human brain. This showed the enormous capacity, adaptivity, and flexibility of the human brain to compensate for any malfunction and to reorganize neural networks to maintain or regain functionality.[16]

Awards and honors edit

  • Fellow, The German Academic Scholarship Foundation
  • Fellow, Alzheimer Research Initiative
  • 2012 – Member, DJA within the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences (KNAW)[3]
  • 2013 – Member, The Young Academy of Europe (YAE)
  • Fulbright Scholar

Bibliography edit

  • Reithler, J., Peters, J. C., & Sack, A. T. (2011). Multimodal transcranial magnetic stimulation: using concurrent neuroimaging to reveal the neural network dynamics of noninvasive brain stimulation. Progress in neurobiology, 94(2), 149–165.
  • Duecker, F., Formisano, E., & Sack, A. T. (2013). Hemispheric differences in the voluntary control of spatial attention: direct evidence for a right-hemispheric dominance within frontal cortex. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 25(8), 1332–1342.
  • Lückmann, H. C., Jacobs, H. I., & Sack, A. T. (2014). The cross-functional role of frontoparietal regions in cognition: internal attention as the overarching mechanism. Progress in neurobiology, 116, 66–86.
  • Ten Oever, S., & Sack, A. T. (2015). Oscillatory phase shapes syllable perception. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 112(52), 15833–15837.
  • Schilberg, L., Engelen, T., Ten Oever, S., Schuhmann, T., De Gelder, B., de Graaf, T. A., & Sack, A. T. (2018). Phase of beta-frequency tACS over primary motor cortex modulates corticospinal excitability. Cortex, 103, 142–152.
  • Ten Oever, S., De Weerd, P., & Sack, A. T. (2020). Phase-dependent amplification of working memory content and performance. Nature communications, 11(1), 1–8.
  • Peters, J. C., Reithler, J., Graaf, T. A. D., Schuhmann, T., Goebel, R., & Sack, A. T. (2020). Concurrent human TMS-EEG-fMRI enables monitoring of oscillatory brain state-dependent gating of cortico-subcortical network activity. Communications biology, 3(1), 1–11.
  • Gallotto, S., Duecker, F., Ten Oever, S., Schuhmann, T., De Graaf, T. A., & Sack, A. T. (2020). Relating alpha power modulations to competing visuospatial attention theories. NeuroImage, 207, 116429.
  • Ten Oever, S., Sack, A. T., Oehrn, C. R., & Axmacher, N. (2021). An engram of intentionally forgotten information. Nature communications, 12(1), 1–14.
  • Veniero, D., Gross, J., Morand, S., Duecker, F., Sack, A. T., & Thut, G. (2021). Top-down control of visual cortex by the frontal eye fields through oscillatory realignment. Nature communications, 12(1), 1–13.
  • Voetterl, Helena T. S.; Sack, Alexander T.; Olbrich, Sebastian; Stuiver, Sven; Rouwhorst, Renee; Prentice, Amourie; Pizzagalli, Diego A.; van der Vinne, Nikita; van Waarde, Jeroen A.; Brunovsky, Martin; van Oostrom, Iris; Reitsma, Ben; Fekkes, Johan; van Dijk, Hanneke; Arns, Martijn (16 November 2023). "Alpha peak frequency-based Brainmarker-I as a method to stratify to pharmacotherapy and brain stimulation treatments in depression". Nature Mental Health. 1 (12): 1023–1032. doi:10.1038/s44220-023-00160-7.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d "Alexander Sack (A.T.)". Maastrichtuniversity.nl. Retrieved 16 February 2022.
  2. ^ "ORCID". Orcid.org. Retrieved 16 February 2022.
  3. ^ a b "Alexander Sack - The Young Academy Profile".
  4. ^ "Brain Stimulation and Cognition - Faculty of Psychology and Neuroscience - Maastricht University". Maastrichtuniversity.nl. Retrieved 16 February 2022.
  5. ^ "Education - Alexander Sack (A.T.) - Maastricht University". Maastrichtuniversity.nl. Retrieved 16 February 2022.
  6. ^ "Work for third parties - Alexander Sack (A.T.) - Maastricht University". Maastrichtuniversity.nl. Retrieved 16 February 2022.
  7. ^ "Centre for Integrative Neuroscience (CIN) - Research - Maastricht University". Maastrichtuniversity.nl. Retrieved 16 February 2022.
  8. ^ "Alexander T Sack's lab | Maastricht University (UM)". Researchgate.net. Retrieved 16 February 2022.
  9. ^ Peters, Judith C.; Reithler, Joel; Graaf, Tom A. de; Schuhmann, Teresa; Goebel, Rainer; Sack, Alexander T. (22 January 2020). "Concurrent human TMS-EEG-fMRI enables monitoring of oscillatory brain state-dependent gating of cortico-subcortical network activity". Communications Biology. 3 (1): 40. doi:10.1038/s42003-020-0764-0. PMC 6976670. PMID 31969657.
  10. ^ Sack, Alexander T.; Kohler, Axel; Bestmann, Sven; Linden, David E. J.; Dechent, Peter; Goebel, Rainer; Baudewig, Juergen (December 2007). "Imaging the Brain Activity Changes Underlying Impaired Visuospatial Judgments: Simultaneous fMRI, TMS, and Behavioral Studies". Cerebral Cortex. 17 (12): 2841–2852. doi:10.1093/cercor/bhm013. PMID 17337745.
  11. ^ Sack, Alexander T.; Linden, David E.J. (September 2003). "Combining transcranial magnetic stimulation and functional imaging in cognitive brain research: possibilities and limitations". Brain Research Reviews. 43 (1): 41–56. doi:10.1016/s0165-0173(03)00191-7. PMID 14499461. S2CID 25239100.
  12. ^ Lückmann, Helen C.; Jacobs, Heidi I.L.; Sack, Alexander T. (May 2014). "The cross-functional role of frontoparietal regions in cognition: internal attention as the overarching mechanism". Progress in Neurobiology. 116: 66–86. doi:10.1016/j.pneurobio.2014.02.002. PMID 24530293. S2CID 207407158.
  13. ^ Ten Oever, Sanne; Meierdierks, Tobias; Duecker, Felix; De Graaf, Tom A.; Sack, Alexander T. (17 June 2020). "Phase-Coded Oscillatory Ordering Promotes the Separation of Closely Matched Representations to Optimize Perceptual Discrimination". iScience. 23 (7): 101282. Bibcode:2020iSci...23j1282T. doi:10.1016/j.isci.2020.101282. PMC 7326734. PMID 32604063.
  14. ^ S, Ten Oever; T, Meierdierks; F, Duecker; Ta, De Graaf; At, Sack (24 July 2020). "Phase-Coded Oscillatory Ordering Promotes the Separation of Closely Matched Representations to Optimize Perceptual Discrimination". iScience. 23 (7): 101282. Bibcode:2020iSci...23j1282T. doi:10.1016/j.isci.2020.101282. PMC 7326734. PMID 32604063.
  15. ^ Ten Oever, Sanne; De Weerd, Peter; Sack, Alexander T. (14 April 2020). "Phase-dependent amplification of working memory content and performance". Nature Communications. 11 (1): 1832. Bibcode:2020NatCo..11.1832T. doi:10.1038/s41467-020-15629-7. PMC 7156664. PMID 32286288.
  16. ^ a b Sack, A. T.; Camprodon, J. A.; Pascual-Leone, A.; Goebel, R. (29 April 2005). "The Dynamics of Interhemispheric Compensatory Processes in Mental Imagery". Science. 308 (5722): 702–704. Bibcode:2005Sci...308..702S. doi:10.1126/science.1107784. PMID 15860630. S2CID 18720734.

alexander, sack, born, october, 1972, german, neuroscientist, cognitive, psychologist, currently, appointed, full, professor, chair, applied, cognitive, neuroscience, faculty, psychology, neuroscience, maastricht, university, also, founder, board, member, dutc. Alexander T Sack born 9 October 1972 is a German neuroscientist and cognitive psychologist He is currently appointed as a full professor and chair of applied cognitive neuroscience at the Faculty of Psychology and Neuroscience at Maastricht University He is also co founder and board member of the Dutch Flemish Brain Stimulation Foundation director of the International Clinical TMS Certification Course co director of the Center for Integrative Neuroscience CIN and the Scientific Director of the Transcranial Brain Stimulation Policlinic at Maastricht University Medical Centre 1 Alexander T SackBorn 1972 10 09 9 October 1972 age 51 Frankfurt am Main GermanyNationalityGermanOccupation s Neuroscientist Cognitive Psychologist Academic and ResearcherAwardsFellow The German Academic Scholarship FoundationFellow Alzheimer Research Initiative Fulbright Scholar VENI VIDI VICI LaureateAcademic backgroundEducationB Sc in Psychology M Sc in Psychology PhD in Natural SciencesAlma materFrankfurt University GermanyAcademic workInstitutionsMaastricht University Sack s research interests mainly surround brain stimulation and applied cognitive neuroscience He specializes in noninvasive brain stimulation fundamental and applied cognitive neuroscience and clinical brain research 2 Sack was Fellow of The German Academic Scholarship Foundation and a Fellow of the Alzheimer Research Initiative He has been a member of The Young Academy of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences KNAW 3 and The Young Academy of Europe YAE Contents 1 Education 2 Career 3 Research 3 1 Multimodal brain stimulation and brain imaging 3 2 Flexible cognition and neural oscillations 3 3 Cognitive enhancement 3 4 Brain plasticity 4 Awards and honors 5 Bibliography 6 ReferencesEducation editHe studied Psychology and Neuroscience and completed his bachelor s degree in Psychology in 1995 at Johann Wolfgang Goethe University in Frankfurt am Main where he also received his master s degree in 2000 He received his PhD in Neuroscience in 2003 1 Career editSack was admitted to the doctoral program at Frankfurt University in 2000 supported by the Studienstiftung des Deutschen Volkes The German Academic Scholarship Foundation He completed his PhD in Neuroscience in 2003 He has been the Principal Investigator and Head of Research Section Brain Stimulation and Cognition at the Maastricht Brain Imaging Centre M BIC since 2005 4 In 2009 he was appointed chairman and program director of the international and interfaculty Research Master in Cognitive and Clinical Neuroscience at Maastricht University 5 In 2015 he co founded and chaired the Dutch Flemish Brain Stimulation Foundation 6 He served as the Head of Department of Cognitive Neuroscience at Maastricht University from 2015 to 2016 after which he was appointed as Vice Dean Research at the Faculty of Psychology and Neuroscience at Maastricht University from 2016 to 2020 Since 2017 he has also been co director of the Center for Integrative Neuroscience CIN there 7 Sack s academic appointments at Maastricht University include his Assistant Professorship at the Department of Cognitive Neuroscience from 2005 to 2008 8 after which he was appointed as an Associate Professor of Cognition and Brain Plasticity until 2011 Since then he has been a Full Professor of Brain Stimulation and Applied Cognitive Neuroscience at the Faculty of Psychology and Neuroscience at Maastricht University Apart from Maastricht University he has been a Visiting Professor at the Department of Experimental Biomedicine and Clinical Neurosciences Palermo University Italy since 2015 1 Research editSack is a pioneer and influential leader in brain stimulation and cognitive neuroscience research He contributed to uncovering the brain dynamics underlying human cognition by combining and developing noninvasive brain imaging and brain stimulation techniques As a principal investigator of Brain Stimulation and Cognition at the Maastricht Brain Imaging Centre his research mainly focusses on the neurobiological and psychological principles underlying attention learning memory and cognitive control His scientific approach is characterized by combining various brain research techniques including psychophysics eye tracking functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging fMRI Electroencephalography EEG Transcranial Brain Stimulation especially Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation TMS and Transcranial Electric Stimulation TES including TDCS and TACS Along with his team he spearheaded the development of simultaneously implemented TMS fMRI EEG during cognitive behavior allowing the application of brain stimulation while recording the individual brain network responses fMRI and oscillatory brain states EEG of cognitively engaged participants 1 Multimodal brain stimulation and brain imaging edit Sack showed that direct and precise monitoring of casual dependencies among oscillatory states and signal propagation throughout cortico subcortical networks is enabled by concurrent TMS EEG fMRI which provides a promising noninvasive avenue of subject specific network research into dynamic cognitive circuits and their dysfunction His innovative approach enables the direct and noninvasive probing of brain state dependent signal propagation within specific brain wide functional networks and to study how temporal oscillations and spatial brain wide networks coding dynamics interrelate 9 In an earlier combined TMS fMRI study he applied transcranial magnetic stimulation TMS to parietal cortices during concurrent functional magnetic resonance imaging fMRI and while participants were executing different visuospatial tasks The results support the idea that visuospatial deficits following parietal damage are caused by a perturbation of activity across a specific frontoparietal network with right hemispheric dominance The research also shows that concurrent fMRI and magnetic brain stimulation during task execution allows to identify and visualize networks of brain areas that are functionally related to specific cognitive processes 10 In a related theoretical contribution Sack describes different approaches of combining TMS with functional neuroimaging techniques along with shortcoming of TMS After a critical analysis of the resulting conceptual and methodological limitations that the investigation of functional brain behavior relationships still must face he argued that some but not all of the methodological limitations of TMS could be overcome by combination with functional neuroimaging 11 Flexible cognition and neural oscillations edit Sack proposed that oscillations underlie communication between cognitive brain regions enabling the flexible configuration of meaningful brain networks depending on cognitive demands He also revised the functional role of the dorsal attention network DAN proposing that this specific network supports a very basic cognitive mechanism being the neural source of attentional biasing signals that enhance maintain and reactivate representations in especially perceptual brain modules to enable these various cognitive processes The DAN thus acts as a critical hub in the flexible cognitive systems of the brain indicating its overarching role in cognition 12 Cognitive enhancement edit Sack revealed that selective attention can be enhanced in healthy volunteers by applying personalized oscillatory based transcranial brain stimulation Sack and his team combined EEG with transcranial alternating current stimulation EEG tACS to entrain the individual power amplitude of alpha oscillatory activity in one hemisphere of the brain Importantly this EEG based tACS intervention not only significantly increased lateralized alpha oscillations as validated by EEG but also significantly improved the ability of healthy participants to focus detect and discriminate stimuli in one specific hemifield boosting selective spatial attention The cognitive performance was significantly better as compared to no brain stimulation showing that transcranial electric brain stimulation can lead to cognitive enhancements In the field of memory Sack discovered that storing multiple items in working memory is brought about by clustering these different items along different oscillatory phases Sack could show that this type of oscillatory sorting scheme within working memory is indeed functionally relevant for behavioral performances 13 Sack further showed that theta and alpha phase biases near boundary item categorization responses to one category or the other and that participants with stronger oscillatory clustering in the theta range showed a sharper discrimination performance between item categories These findings of behaviorally relevant functional phase ordering represented a milestone in unravelling the behavioral relevance of so far primarily theoretical accounts of phase coded oscillatory ordering The repetitive nature of oscillations ensures that each item can be refreshed at its own phase and thereby maintained 14 Sack also decoded distributed occipito parietal EEG signals with a linear classifier during a working memory retention interval while using a sensory impulse stimulus to boost the read out of distributed neural activity related to the content held in working memory This allowed Sack and his team to reveal that the content of memorized information during retention is modulated by the phase of ongoing oscillations in the theta alpha range and importantly that memory performance is modulated by the phase at which the impulse stimulus was presented He discovered that the intervention of presenting the impulse stimulus during phases of high memory content enhanced working memory performance in healthy volunteers These studies of his lab show that the information held in memory is represented cyclically in posterior cortical regions and that modulation of this memory content influences memory performance Collectively these results represent empirical evidence in humans that working memory information is maximized within limited phase ranges and that phase selective stimulation can improve working memory even in healthy young volunteers 15 Brain plasticity edit In a seminal Science publication Sack introduced a novel TMS procedure that combines the respective advantages of creating a temporary virtual lesion through rTMS with the precise chronometric study offered by event related triple pulse TMS 16 This study showed that TMS induced virtual lesions can evoke functional reorganizations during which one part of the brain immediately compensates for activity disruptions in another brain region by taking over its specific cognitive function during task execution revealing the highly dynamic properties of the human brain This showed the enormous capacity adaptivity and flexibility of the human brain to compensate for any malfunction and to reorganize neural networks to maintain or regain functionality 16 Awards and honors editFellow The German Academic Scholarship Foundation Fellow Alzheimer Research Initiative 2012 Member DJA within the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences KNAW 3 2013 Member The Young Academy of Europe YAE Fulbright ScholarBibliography editReithler J Peters J C amp Sack A T 2011 Multimodal transcranial magnetic stimulation using concurrent neuroimaging to reveal the neural network dynamics of noninvasive brain stimulation Progress in neurobiology 94 2 149 165 Duecker F Formisano E amp Sack A T 2013 Hemispheric differences in the voluntary control of spatial attention direct evidence for a right hemispheric dominance within frontal cortex Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 25 8 1332 1342 Luckmann H C Jacobs H I amp Sack A T 2014 The cross functional role of frontoparietal regions in cognition internal attention as the overarching mechanism Progress in neurobiology 116 66 86 Ten Oever S amp Sack A T 2015 Oscillatory phase shapes syllable perception Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 112 52 15833 15837 Schilberg L Engelen T Ten Oever S Schuhmann T De Gelder B de Graaf T A amp Sack A T 2018 Phase of beta frequency tACS over primary motor cortex modulates corticospinal excitability Cortex 103 142 152 Ten Oever S De Weerd P amp Sack A T 2020 Phase dependent amplification of working memory content and performance Nature communications 11 1 1 8 Peters J C Reithler J Graaf T A D Schuhmann T Goebel R amp Sack A T 2020 Concurrent human TMS EEG fMRI enables monitoring of oscillatory brain state dependent gating of cortico subcortical network activity Communications biology 3 1 1 11 Gallotto S Duecker F Ten Oever S Schuhmann T De Graaf T A amp Sack A T 2020 Relating alpha power modulations to competing visuospatial attention theories NeuroImage 207 116429 Ten Oever S Sack A T Oehrn C R amp Axmacher N 2021 An engram of intentionally forgotten information Nature communications 12 1 1 14 Veniero D Gross J Morand S Duecker F Sack A T amp Thut G 2021 Top down control of visual cortex by the frontal eye fields through oscillatory realignment Nature communications 12 1 1 13 Voetterl Helena T S Sack Alexander T Olbrich Sebastian Stuiver Sven Rouwhorst Renee Prentice Amourie Pizzagalli Diego A van der Vinne Nikita van Waarde Jeroen A Brunovsky Martin van Oostrom Iris Reitsma Ben Fekkes Johan van Dijk Hanneke Arns Martijn 16 November 2023 Alpha peak frequency based Brainmarker I as a method to stratify to pharmacotherapy and brain stimulation treatments in depression Nature Mental Health 1 12 1023 1032 doi 10 1038 s44220 023 00160 7 References edit a b c d Alexander Sack A T Maastrichtuniversity nl Retrieved 16 February 2022 ORCID Orcid org Retrieved 16 February 2022 a b Alexander Sack The Young Academy Profile Brain Stimulation and Cognition Faculty of Psychology and Neuroscience Maastricht University Maastrichtuniversity nl Retrieved 16 February 2022 Education Alexander Sack A T Maastricht University Maastrichtuniversity nl Retrieved 16 February 2022 Work for third parties Alexander Sack A T Maastricht University Maastrichtuniversity nl Retrieved 16 February 2022 Centre for Integrative Neuroscience CIN Research Maastricht University Maastrichtuniversity nl Retrieved 16 February 2022 Alexander T Sack s lab Maastricht University UM Researchgate net Retrieved 16 February 2022 Peters Judith C Reithler Joel Graaf Tom A de Schuhmann Teresa Goebel Rainer Sack Alexander T 22 January 2020 Concurrent human TMS EEG fMRI enables monitoring of oscillatory brain state dependent gating of cortico subcortical network activity Communications Biology 3 1 40 doi 10 1038 s42003 020 0764 0 PMC 6976670 PMID 31969657 Sack Alexander T Kohler Axel Bestmann Sven Linden David E J Dechent Peter Goebel Rainer Baudewig Juergen December 2007 Imaging the Brain Activity Changes Underlying Impaired Visuospatial Judgments Simultaneous fMRI TMS and Behavioral Studies Cerebral Cortex 17 12 2841 2852 doi 10 1093 cercor bhm013 PMID 17337745 Sack Alexander T Linden David E J September 2003 Combining transcranial magnetic stimulation and functional imaging in cognitive brain research possibilities and limitations Brain Research Reviews 43 1 41 56 doi 10 1016 s0165 0173 03 00191 7 PMID 14499461 S2CID 25239100 Luckmann Helen C Jacobs Heidi I L Sack Alexander T May 2014 The cross functional role of frontoparietal regions in cognition internal attention as the overarching mechanism Progress in Neurobiology 116 66 86 doi 10 1016 j pneurobio 2014 02 002 PMID 24530293 S2CID 207407158 Ten Oever Sanne Meierdierks Tobias Duecker Felix De Graaf Tom A Sack Alexander T 17 June 2020 Phase Coded Oscillatory Ordering Promotes the Separation of Closely Matched Representations to Optimize Perceptual Discrimination iScience 23 7 101282 Bibcode 2020iSci 23j1282T doi 10 1016 j isci 2020 101282 PMC 7326734 PMID 32604063 S Ten Oever T Meierdierks F Duecker Ta De Graaf At Sack 24 July 2020 Phase Coded Oscillatory Ordering Promotes the Separation of Closely Matched Representations to Optimize Perceptual Discrimination iScience 23 7 101282 Bibcode 2020iSci 23j1282T doi 10 1016 j isci 2020 101282 PMC 7326734 PMID 32604063 Ten Oever Sanne De Weerd Peter Sack Alexander T 14 April 2020 Phase dependent amplification of working memory content and performance Nature Communications 11 1 1832 Bibcode 2020NatCo 11 1832T doi 10 1038 s41467 020 15629 7 PMC 7156664 PMID 32286288 a b Sack A T Camprodon J A Pascual Leone A Goebel R 29 April 2005 The Dynamics of Interhemispheric Compensatory Processes in Mental Imagery Science 308 5722 702 704 Bibcode 2005Sci 308 702S doi 10 1126 science 1107784 PMID 15860630 S2CID 18720734 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alexander T Sack amp oldid 1221320252, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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