A range of non-invasive transcranial brain stimulation (NTBS) techniques are available to evoke brain activity or to modulate the brain´s ongoing activity.

Eduroam is a wireless network available on institutions for research and education across the world.Employees and students at DRCMR can access the network at DRCMR and other institutions affilated with eduroam with their username and password from DRCMR. Guests from institutions affilated eduroam can also access the network at DRCMR. They should refer to the department of IT for their own institution.
You may visit the home page for the institution behind the eduroam network and collaboration or the website of the Danish branch.
Please download the installer for your platform from https://cat.eduroam.org/. Your username and password is the same as for your email account at DRCMR.
The installer only has to be run the first time a connection is established from a particular device and is the same regardless of whether the network being used is at DRCMR or another institution where eduroam is available.
For security reasons it is very important to use the installer to set up the network connection.
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) provides unprecedented imaging of the human brain and other soft tissues without involving exposure to radiation. MRI plays a key role in the diagnosis and follow-up of diseases in brain, spine, joints, muscle and inner organs.
Read more
A cutting-edge research infrastructure that includes six MR scanners offers unique possibilities for translational research. The first Danish ultra-high field (7 tesla) scanner for human use was inaugurated in 2015. This will give unprecedented opportunities to examine how health and disease impact the function and structure of the brain. Read more
Collaboration is key! Our research benefits from manifold regional and international research alliances with highly profiled research groups. The DRCMR is embedded in a large diagnostic imaging unit at Hvidovre Hospital providing optimal conditions for close interaction with clinicians and radiologists.
Our overarching goal is to unravel the underlying mechanism in brain development, aging and diseases. We also advance our understanding of how therapeutic interventions act on the brain, for example in patients with multiple sclerosis, Parkinson's disease, traumatic brain injury, dementia, anorexia, schizophrenia, and depression.
Sorry, the link you followed is mistyped or no longer appropriate. The page you wanted is likely still available, however.
Please search site manually or use Google site search to locate the page you came for.
If you came here by following a saved link (e.g. bookmark), then you must update it.
If you instead followed a link here, then please notify the editor of the page linking here.
Funded by a large “Grant of Excellence” awarded by the Lundbeck Foundation to Hartwig R. Siebner (25 Mill DKK 2010-2016), the ContAct Group offers an attractive platform for talented young neuroscientists to identify and understand the brain dynamics behind the motor control of voluntary actions.