=== John C. Mosher, PhD ===
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''Epilepsy Center<<BR>>Cleveland Clinic Neurological Institute, Cleveland, OH USA''

Dr.  Mosher received his Bachelors in Electrical Engineering  with Highest  Honors from the Georgia Institute of Technology in 1983.  From 1981 -  1982 he was an exchange scholar student with the  Eidgenoessische  Technische Hochschule Zuerich, Switzerland. From 1979 -  1983 he was  also a Cooperative Education student with Hughes Aircraft  Company in  Fullerton, California. From 1983 - 1993, he worked at TRW in  Los  Angeles, California, as a scientist and senior scientist researching   signal analysis procedures for electromagnetic pulse effects on   aircraft. While at TRW, he received his M.S. (1985) and Ph.D. (1993) in   Electrical Engineering from the Signal & Image Processing Institute   of the University of Southern California. Upon graduation in 1993, he   accepted a staff position at the Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los   Alamos, New Mexico. In May 2008, Dr. Mosher joined the Physician Staff   in the Epilepsy Center to head its new magnetoencephalography (MEG)   research program.

Since 1994, Dr. Mosher has been  without  interruption a Principal Investigator or Co-Investigator on  competitive  grants from the National Institutes of Health, as well as  several  competitive Laboratory Directed Research and Development  grants. In his  research role, he has served as a formal Mentor of  Laboratory-employed  students and post-docs, and as an informal mentor  of his collaborator's  students and post-docs. Working closely with  these students and his  collaborators, he has continuously published in  his field of biomedical  research since 1990.

As  of 2011, Dr. Mosher has over 2,400  citations to over 100 papers  appearing in the ISI Citation database. His  landmark paper in 1992  remains today one of the most cited original  research papers in  magnetoencephalography, with over 650 total citations  of the original  article. Additionally, this 1992 paper was included in  the landmark  1993 review paper, “Magnetoencephalography — theory,  instrumentation,  and applications to noninvasive studies of the working  human brain,” M  Hämäläinen, R Hari, RJ Ilmoniemi, J Knuutila, …, ''Reviews of Modern Physics'',   which itself now has over 1,800 citations, making Dr. Mosher’s  notation  and approach one of the standards in MEG signal processing.