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  1. Providing active assistance to complete desired arm movements is a common technique in upper extremity rehabilitation after stroke. Such active assistance may improve recovery by affecting somatosensory input,...

    Authors: Leonard E Kahn, Michele L Zygman, W Zev Rymer and David J Reinkensmeyer
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2006 3:12
  2. The original use of biofeedback to train single muscle activity in static positions or movement unrelated to function did not correlate well to motor function improvements in patients with central nervous syst...

    Authors: He Huang, Steven L Wolf and Jiping He
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2006 3:11
  3. The cervical muscles are considered a potential site of whiplash injury, and there is a need to understand the cervical muscle response under non-conventional whiplash impact scenarios, including variable body...

    Authors: Shrawan Kumar, Robert Ferrari, Yogesh Narayan and Edgar Vieira
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2006 3:10
  4. Spaceflight has been shown to cause atrophy, reduced functional capacity, and increased fatigue in lower-limb skeletal muscles. The mechanisms of these losses are not fully understood but are thought to result...

    Authors: Mark C Pierre, Kerim O Genc, Micah Litow, Brad Humphreys, Andrea J Rice, Christian C Maender and Peter R Cavanagh
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2006 3:8
  5. The assessment of the accuracy of the pose estimation of human bones and consequent joint kinematics is of primary relevance in human movement analysis. This study evaluated the performance of selected pose es...

    Authors: Andrea Cereatti, Ugo Della Croce and Aurelio Cappozzo
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2006 3:7
  6. Over the centuries the evolution of methods for the capture of human movement has been motivated by the need for new information on the characteristics of normal and pathological human movement. This study was...

    Authors: Lars Mündermann, Stefano Corazza and Thomas P Andriacchi
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2006 3:6
  7. Brand's four reasons for clinical tests and his analysis of the characteristics of valid biomechanical tests for use in orthopaedics are taken as a basis for determining what methodologies are required for gai...

    Authors: Richard Baker
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2006 3:4
  8. Powered lower limb orthoses could reduce therapist labor during gait rehabilitation after neurological injury. However, it is not clear how patients respond to powered assistance during stepping. Patients migh...

    Authors: Gregory S Sawicki, Antoinette Domingo and Daniel P Ferris
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2006 3:3
  9. In understanding how the human body perceives and responds to small slip-like motions, information on how one senses the slip is essential. The effect of aging and plantar sensory loss on detection of a slip c...

    Authors: Samantha J Richerson, Scott M Morstatt, Kristopher K O'Neal, Gloria Patrick and Charles J Robinson
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2006 3:2
  10. The general objective of the "Rehabilitation Medicine Summit: Building Research Capacity" was to advance and promote research in medical rehabilitation by making recommendations to expand research capacity. Th...

    Authors: Walter R Frontera, Marcus J Fuhrer, Alan M Jette, Leighton Chan, Rory A Cooper, Pamela W Duncan, John D Kemp, Kenneth J Ottenbacher, P Hunter Peckham, Elliot J Roth and Denise G Tate
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2006 3:1
  11. The peak-to-peak (P-P) amplitude of the maximum M-wave and the area of the negative phase of the curve are important measures that serve as methodological controls in H-reflex studies, motor unit number estima...

    Authors: Kristina M Calder, Lesley-Ann Hall, Steve M Lester, J Greig Inglis and David A Gabriel
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2005 2:33
  12. Unilateral spatial neglect (USN) is a common syndrome in which a patient fails to report or respond to stimulation from the side of space opposite a brain lesion, where these symptoms are not due to primary se...

    Authors: Toshiaki Tanaka, Shunichi Sugihara, Hiroyuki Nara, Shuichi Ino and Tohru Ifukube
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2005 2:31
  13. Almost 10% of all individuals who are legally blind also have a mobility impairment. The majority of these individuals are dependent on others for mobility. The Smart Power Assistance Module (SPAM) for manual ...

    Authors: Richard Simpson, Edmund LoPresti, Steve Hayashi, Songfeng Guo, Dan Ding, William Ammer, Vinod Sharma and Rory Cooper
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2005 2:30
  14. The present study investigates balance control mechanisms, their variations with the absence of visual input, and their development in children from 7 to 11 years old, in order to provide insights on the devel...

    Authors: Maurizio Schmid, Silvia Conforto, Luisa Lopez, Paolo Renzi and Tommaso D'Alessio
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2005 2:29
  15. To study the effects of reduced lighting on the gait of older adults with a high level gait disorder (HLGD) and to compare their response to that of healthy elderly controls.

    Authors: Anat Kesler, Gregory Leibovich, Talia Herman, Leor Gruendlinger, Nir Giladi and Jeffrey M Hausdorff
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2005 2:27
  16. Little information exists about the involvement of attention in the control of gait rhythmicity. Variability of both stride time and stride length is closely related to the control of the rhythmic stepping mec...

    Authors: Olivier Beauchet, Véronique Dubost, François R Herrmann and Reto W Kressig
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2005 2:26
  17. The stride interval in healthy human gait fluctuates from step to step in a random manner and scaling of the interstride interval time series motivated previous investigators to conclude that this time series ...

    Authors: Bruce J West and Miroslaw Latka
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2005 2:24
  18. The ability to maintain a steady gait rhythm is impaired in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD). This aspect of locomotor dyscontrol, which likely reflects impaired automaticity in PD, can be quantified by ...

    Authors: Silvi Frenkel-Toledo, Nir Giladi, Chava Peretz, Talia Herman, Leor Gruendlinger and Jeffrey M Hausdorff
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2005 2:23
  19. Variability in quantitative gait data arises from many potential sources, including natural temporal dynamics of neuromotor control, pathologies of the neurological or musculoskeletal systems, the effects of a...

    Authors: Tom Chau, Scott Young and Sue Redekop
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2005 2:22
  20. Decreased gait speed and increased stride time, stride length, double support time, and stance time variability have consistently been associated with falling whereas step width variability has not been strong...

    Authors: Jennifer S Brach, Jaime E Berlin, Jessie M VanSwearingen, Anne B Newman and Stephanie A Studenski
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2005 2:21
  21. Gait is impaired in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) and Huntington's disease (HD), but gait dynamics in mouse models of PD and HD have not been described. Here we quantified temporal and spatial indices...

    Authors: Ivo Amende, Ajit Kale, Scott McCue, Scott Glazier, James P Morgan and Thomas G Hampton
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2005 2:20
  22. The study of gait variability, the stride-to-stride fluctuations in walking, offers a complementary way of quantifying locomotion and its changes with aging and disease as well as a means of monitoring the eff...

    Authors: Jeffrey M Hausdorff
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2005 2:19
  23. The majority of current portable orthotic devices and rehabilitative braces provide stability, apply precise pressure, or help maintain alignment of the joints with out the capability for real time monitoring ...

    Authors: Constantinos Mavroidis, Jason Nikitczuk, Brian Weinberg, Gil Danaher, Katherine Jensen, Philip Pelletier, Jennifer Prugnarola, Ryan Stuart, Roberto Arango, Matt Leahey, Robert Pavone, Andrew Provo and Dan Yasevac
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2005 2:18
  24. In this paper we describe LiveNet, a flexible wearable platform intended for long-term ambulatory health monitoring with real-time data streaming and context classification. Based on the MIT Wearable Computing...

    Authors: Michael Sung, Carl Marci and Alex Pentland
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2005 2:17
  25. Advances in miniature sensor technology have led to the development of wearable systems that allow one to monitor motor activities in the field. A variety of classifiers have been proposed in the past, but lit...

    Authors: Delsey M Sherrill, Marilyn L Moy, John J Reilly and Paolo Bonato
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2005 2:16
  26. Intelligent management of wearable applications in rehabilitation requires an understanding of the current context, which is constantly changing over the rehabilitation process because of changes in the person...

    Authors: Yu Wang and Jack M Winters
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2005 2:15
  27. Good balance depends on accurate and adequate information from the senses. One way to substitute missing sensory information for balance is with biofeedback technology. We previously reported that audio-biofee...

    Authors: Marco Dozza, Lorenzo Chiari, Becky Chan, Laura Rocchi, Fay B Horak and Angelo Cappello
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2005 2:13
  28. Mathematical muscle models may be useful for the determination of appropriate musculoskeletal stresses that will safely maintain the integrity of muscle and bone following spinal cord injury. Several models ha...

    Authors: Laura A Frey Law and Richard K Shields
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2005 2:12
  29. The cervical muscles are considered a potential site of whiplash injury, and there are many impact scenarios for whiplash injury. There is a need to understand the cervical muscle response under non-convention...

    Authors: Shrawan Kumar, Robert Ferrari and Yogesh Narayan
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2005 2:11
  30. Few tools exist for quantifying locomotor stability in balance impaired populations. The objective of this study was to develop and evaluate a technique for quantifying stability of stepping in healthy people ...

    Authors: Chris A McGibbon, David E Krebs and Robert Wagenaar
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2005 2:9
  31. Monitoring body kinematics has fundamental relevance in several biological and technical disciplines. In particular the possibility to exactly know the posture may furnish a main aid in rehabilitation topics. ...

    Authors: Alessandro Tognetti, Federico Lorussi, Raphael Bartalesi, Silvana Quaglini, Mario Tesconi, Giuseppe Zupone and Danilo De Rossi
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2005 2:8
  32. Recent technological advances in integrated circuits, wireless communications, and physiological sensing allow miniature, lightweight, ultra-low power, intelligent monitoring devices. A number of these devices...

    Authors: Emil Jovanov, Aleksandar Milenkovic, Chris Otto and Piet C de Groen
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2005 2:6
  33. This paper provides an overview of initial research conducted in the development of pressure-sensitive foam and its application in wearable sensing. The foam sensor is composed of polypyrrole-coated polyuretha...

    Authors: Lucy E Dunne, Sarah Brady, Barry Smyth and Dermot Diamond
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2005 2:4
  34. The pulse oximeter, a medical device capable of measuring blood oxygen saturation (SpO2), has been shown to be a valuable device for monitoring patients in critical conditions. In order to incorporate the tech...

    Authors: Yong-sheng Yan, Carmen CY Poon and Yuan-ting Zhang
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2005 2:3
  35. Wide field of view virtual environments offer some unique features that may be beneficial for use in vestibular rehabilitation. For one, optic flow information extracted from the periphery may be critical for ...

    Authors: Patrick J Sparto, Susan L Whitney, Larry F Hodges, Joseph M Furman and Mark S Redfern
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2004 1:14
  36. Virtual environments (VE) are a powerful tool for various forms of rehabilitation. Coupling VE with high-speed networking [Tele-Immersion] that approaches speeds of 100 Gb/sec can greatly expand its influence ...

    Authors: Robert V Kenyon, Jason Leigh and Emily A Keshner
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2004 1:13
  37. Video capture virtual reality (VR) uses a video camera and software to track movement in a single plane without the need to place markers on specific bodily locations. The user's image is thereby embedded with...

    Authors: Patrice L Weiss, Debbie Rand, Noomi Katz and Rachel Kizony
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2004 1:12
  38. Virtual reality (VR) is an innovative tool for sensorimotor rehabilitation increasingly being employed in clinical and community settings. Despite the growing interest in VR, few studies have determined the va...

    Authors: Antonin Viau, Anatol G Feldman, Bradford J McFadyen and Mindy F Levin
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2004 1:11
  39. Virtual Reality (VR) provides a unique medium suited to the achievement of several requirements for effective rehabilitation intervention. Specifically, therapy can be provided within a functional, purposeful ...

    Authors: Heidi Sveistrup
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2004 1:10

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