Ebru Yıldırım
[email protected]Ebru Yıldırım graduated from Istanbul Medipol University,, Department of Physical Therapy and Rehabilitation in 2016. She completed her MSc degree from Istanbul Medipol University,, Department of Physical Therapy and Rehabilitation in 2017. During the MSc thesis, she joined Prof. Dr. Bahar Güntekin's laboratory at Istanbul Medipol University,. She worked as a scholarship in the projects supported by the Turkish Academy of Sciences (TUBA) and The Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey (TUBITAK). She completed her PhD degree from Istanbul Medipol University, Department of Neuroscience in 2021.
She is currently holding as a teaching assistant position at Istanbul Medipol University, Program of Electroneurophysiology. She has been studying on the analysis of the EEG-brain oscillations in healthy subjects and the patients with the neurodegenerative disease. Her research areas are cognitive neuroscience, EEG, EEG-brain oscillations, EEG-signal analysis, neurodegenerative diseases, cognition, and emotions.
Selected Publications;
EEG Alpha Activity Increased in Response to Transcutaneous Electrical Nervous Stimulation in Young Healthy Subjects but not in the Healthy Elderly.
Yıldırım, E., Güntekin, B., Hanoğlu, L., & Algun, C. (2020). EEG Alpha Activity Increased in Response to Transcutaneous Electrical Nervous Stimulation in Young Healthy Subjects but not in the Healthy Elderly. PeerJ, 8, e8330.
Are there Consistent Abnormalities in Event- Related EEG Oscillations in Patients with Alzheimer’s Disease Compared to Other Diseases Belonging to Dementia?
Güntekin, B., Aktürk, T., Arakaki, X., Bonanni, L., Del Percio, C., Edelmayer, R., Farina, F., Ferri, R., Hanoğlu, L., Kumar, S., Lizio, R., Lopez, S., Murphy, B., Noce, G., Randall, F., Sack, A. T., Stocchi, F., Yener, G., Yıldırım, E., & Babiloni, C. (2021). Are there Consistent Abnormalities in Event- Related EEG Oscillations in Patients with Alzheimer’s Disease Compared to Other Diseases Belonging to Dementia? Psychophysiology, 00e1– 42.
Resting State Alpha Electroencephalographic Rhythms Are Affected by Sex in Cognitively Unimpaired Seniors and Patients with Alzheimer’s Disease and Amnesic Mild Cognitive Impairment: A Retrospective and Exploratory Study.
Babiloni, C., Noce, G., Ferri, R., Lizio, R., Lopez, S., Lorenzo, I., Tucci, F., Soricelli, A., Zurrón, M., Díaz, F., Nobili, F., Arnaldi, D., Famà, F., Buttinelli, C., Giubilei, F., Cipollini, V., Marizzoni, M., Güntekin, B., Yıldırım, E., Hanoğlu, L., Yener, G., Hünerli-Gündüz, D., Onorati, P., Stocchi, F., Vacca, L., Maestú, F., Frisoni, G. B., & Del Percio, C. (2021). Resting State Alpha Electroencephalographic Rhythms Are Affected by Sex in Cognitively Unimpaired Seniors and Patients with Alzheimer’s Disease and Amnesic Mild Cognitive Impairment: A Retrospective and Exploratory Study. Cerebral Cortex, bhab348.
Abnormalities in Auditory and Visual Cognitive Processes are Differentiated with theta Responses in Patients with Parkinson's Disease with and Without Dementia.
Güntekin, B., Aktürk, T., Yıldırım, E., Yılmaz, N. H., Hanoğlu, L., & Yener, G. (2020). Abnormalities in Auditory and Visual Cognitive Processes are Differentiated with theta Responses in Patients with Parkinson's Disease with and Without Dementia. International Journal of Psychophysiology, 153, 65-79.
Theta and Alpha Oscillatory Responses Differentiate Between Six-to Seven-Year-Old Children and Adults During Successful Visual and Auditory Memory Encoding.
Güntekin, B., Uzunlar, H., Çalışoğlu, P., Eroğlu-Ada, F., Yıldırım, E., Aktürk, T., ... & Ceran, Ö. (2020). Theta and Alpha Oscillatory Responses Differentiate Between Six-to Seven-Year-Old Children and Adults During Successful Visual and Auditory Memory Encoding. Brain Research, 1747, 147042.
Impairment in Recognition of Emotional Facial Expressions in Alzheimer's Disease is Represented by EEG Theta and Alpha Responses.
Güntekin, B., Hanoğlu, L., Aktürk, T., Fide, E., Emek-Savaş, D. D., Ruşen, E., Yıldırım, E., Yener, G. G. (2019). Impairment in Recognition of Emotional Facial Expressions in Alzheimer's Disease is Represented by EEG Theta and Alpha Responses. Psychophysiology, 56(11), e13434.