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Overview


Armen Bagdasarov is a fourth-year Ph.D. student in clinical psychology at Duke University. He received his B.A. in psychology at the University of Pennsylvania in 2018. Following, he completed the two-year Sara S. Sparrow Fellowship in Clinical Neuroscience at the Yale Child Study Center. In 2020, Armen received the National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship.

Current Appointments & Affiliations


Recent Publications


Exploring the Association Between EEG Microstates During Resting-State and Error-Related Activity in Young Children.

Journal Article Brain topography · July 2024 The error-related negativity (ERN) is a negative deflection in the electroencephalography (EEG) waveform at frontal-central scalp sites that occurs after error commission. The relationship between the ERN and broader patterns of brain activity measured acr ... Full text Cite

Microstate Analysis of Continuous Infant EEG: Tutorial and Reliability.

Journal Article Brain topography · July 2024 Microstate analysis of resting-state EEG is a unique data-driven method for identifying patterns of scalp potential topographies, or microstates, that reflect stable but transient periods of synchronized neural activity evolving dynamically over time. Duri ... Full text Cite

Spatiotemporal dynamics of EEG microstates in four- to eight-year-old children: Age- and sex-related effects.

Journal Article Developmental cognitive neuroscience · October 2022 The ultrafast spatiotemporal dynamics of large-scale neural networks can be examined using resting-state electroencephalography (EEG) microstates, representing transient periods of synchronized neural activity that evolve dynamically over time. In adults, ... Full text Open Access Cite
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