Sensorimotor rehabilitation : at the crossroads of basic and clinical sciences
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Sensorimotor rehabilitation : at the crossroads of basic and clinical sciences
(Progress in brain research, v.218)
Elsevier, 2015
- hbk.
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This volume of Progress in Brain Research focuses on Sensorimotor Rehabilitation.
Table of Contents
Comprehensive Assessment of Walking Function After Human Spinal Cord Injury
Translating Mechanisms of Neuroprotection, Regeneration, and Repair to Treatment of Spinal Cord Injury
High Resolution Imaging of the Central Nervous System: How Novel Imaging Methods Combined with Navigation Strategies will Advance Patient Care
Assessment of Transmission in Specific Descending Pathways in Relation to Gait and Balance Following Spinal Cord Injury
Exciting Recovery: Augmenting Practice with Stimulation to Optimize Outcomes after Spinal Cord Injury
Facilitation of Descending Excitatory and Spinal Inhibitory Networks from Training of Endurance and Precision Walking in Participants with Incomplete Spinal Cord Injury
Targeted Neuroplasticity for Rehabilitation
The "Beneficial" Effects of Locomotor Training after Various Types of Spinal Lesions in Cats and Rats
Electrophysiological Mapping of Rat Sensorimotor Lumbosacral Spinal Networks after Complete Paralysis
The Extracellular Matrix in Plasticity and Regeneration after CNS Injury and Neurodegenerative Disease
Bench to Bedside: Challenges of Clinical Translation
Restoring Motor Function With Bidirectional Neural Interfaces
Stroke Rehabilitation: Clinical Picture, Assessment and Therapeutic Challenge
Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation for Motor Recovery of the Upper Limb after Stroke
Cortical Mechanisms Underlying Sensorimotor Enhancement Promoted by Walking with Haptic Inputs in a Virtual Environment
Translating the Science into Practice: Shaping Rehabilitation Practice to Enhance Recovery after Brain Damage
Inhibition of the Contralesional Hemisphere after Stroke: Reviewing a few of the Building Blocks with a Focus on Animal Models
Pathways Mediating Functional Recovery
Lost in Translation: Rethinking Approaches to Stroke Recovery
by "Nielsen BookData"