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Monday, 29 January 2007 12:05

Homepage contributions

It is important that everyone contributes to keeping the external homepage updated with interesting and relevant material. You do this by contributing/editing content, but also by reporting any errors you encounter to the most relevant person (Not just any person. Ask around, if in doubt. Pesist till fixed).

To contribute content or edit web pages, e.g. your personal page that may be linked via http://www.drcmr.dk/staff, you need to login. Use your normal DRCMR network login and password. While logged in, an additional User Menu should appear on the DRCMR pages you are browsing.

By default, you will have very few editing rights, but more rights can be given, if relevant, e.g. to pages you maintain. A subtle editing icon will appear on the pages that you have the right to edit. Click it, and fix content.

Avoid cut and paste of formated text from programs like Word or Powerpoint -- formatting codes breaks design and may interfere with further editing. Copy via Notepad, for example, and add your formatting directly in the web page editor.

Avoid scaling high-resolution images -- resize ahead of uploading instead.

Your friendly office mates, or the DRCMR IT support function can help you,  support#drcmr.dk (exchange # with @).

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It is important that everyone contributes to keeping the external homepage updated with interesting and relevant material. You do this by contributing/editing content, but also by reporting any errors you encounter to the most relevant person (Not just any person. Ask around, if in doubt. Pesist till fixed).

To contribute content or edit web pages, e.g. your personal page that may be linked via http://www.drcmr.dk/staff, you need to login. Use your normal DRCMR network login and password. While logged in, an additional User Menu should appear on the DRCMR pages you are browsing.

By default, you will have very few editing rights, but more rights can be given, if relevant, e.g. to pages you maintain. A subtle editing icon will appear on the pages that you have the right to edit. Click it, and fix content.

Avoid cut and paste of formated text from programs like Word or Powerpoint -- formatting codes breaks design and may interfere with further editing. Copy via Notepad, for example, and add your formatting directly in the web page editor.

Avoid scaling high-resolution images -- resize ahead of uploading instead.

Your friendly office mates, or the DRCMR IT support function can help you,  support#drcmr.dk (exchange # with @).

Read 10526 times Last modified on Wednesday, 16 September 2015 22:22

Selected Publications

Beck, Mikkel Malling*, Christiansen, L*,  et al. "Transcranial magnetic stimulation of primary motor cortex elicits an immediate transcranial evoked potential." Brain Stimulation (2024).

Madsen, Mads AJ, et al. "Single and paired TMS pulses engage spatially distinct corticomotor representations in human pericentral cortex." bioRxiv (2024): 2024-10.

Bjørndal, J. R., Beck, M. M., Jespersen, L., Christiansen, L., & Lundbye-Jensen, J. (2024). Hebbian priming of human motor learning. Nature Communications15(1), 5126.

Kesselheim, Janine, et al. "Multipulse transcranial magnetic stimulation of human motor cortex produces short-latency corticomotor facilitation via two distinct mechanisms." Journal of Neurophysiology 129.2 (2023): 410-420.

Group Members

Lasse Christiansen

Group Leader

Hartwig R. Siebner

David Meder

Show all group members (12)

External Collaborators

PostDoc Estelle Raffin

Fonctions Cérébrales et Neuromodulation, Université Joseph Fourier & Inserm, U836, Grenoble Institut des Neurosciences, Grenoble, France


Prof. Olivier David

Fonctions Cérébrales et Neuromodulation, Université Joseph Fourier & Inserm, U836, Grenoble Institut des Neurosciences, Grenoble, France


Assoc. Prof. Mark Schram Christensen

Department of Nutrition, Exercise and Sports, University of Copenhagen and Department of Neuroscience and Pharmacology, University of Copenhagen.


Prof.  Jens Bo Nielsen

Department of Nutrition, Exercise and Sports, University of Copenhagen and Department of Neuroscience and Pharmacology, University of Copenhagen.


Prof. Torsten Dau

Hearing Systems Group, Department of Electrical Engineering,Technical University of Denmark, Kgs. Lyngby, Denmark