Pages that link to "Q51715331"
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The following pages link to Resolving conflicts in task demands during balance recovery: does holding an object inhibit compensatory grasping? (Q51715331):
Displaying 30 items.
- Neural processes mediating the preparation and release of focal motor output are suppressed or absent during imagined movement (Q30384113) (← links)
- A cane improves postural recovery from an unpracticed slip during walking in people with Parkinson disease (Q30524675) (← links)
- A perturbation-based balance training program for older adults: study protocol for a randomised controlled trial (Q33286321) (← links)
- Whole-body responses: neural control and implications for rehabilitation and fall prevention (Q33409329) (← links)
- Determinants of use of a walking device in persons with Parkinson's disease (Q34276010) (← links)
- Stiffness Control of Balance During Quiet Standing and Dual Task in Older Adults: The MOBILIZE Boston Study (Q34430415) (← links)
- The effect of decreased visual acuity on control of posture. (Q35449797) (← links)
- Anticipatory and compensatory postural adjustments in conditions of body asymmetry induced by holding an object (Q36225501) (← links)
- Automated postural responses are modified in a functional manner by instruction (Q36517691) (← links)
- A weak balance: the contribution of muscle weakness to postural instability and falls (Q37246668) (← links)
- The use of peripheral vision to guide perturbation-evoked reach-to-grasp balance-recovery reactions. (Q37482198) (← links)
- Biomechanical and neurophysiological mechanisms related to postural control and efficiency of movement: a review (Q38055238) (← links)
- Sideways fall-induced impact force and its effect on hip fracture risk: a review. (Q38668666) (← links)
- Control of grip force and vertical posture while holding an object and being perturbed (Q38809681) (← links)
- Use of a cane for recovery from backward balance loss during treadmill walking (Q44357767) (← links)
- Gaze Behavior of Older Adults in Responding to Unexpected Loss of Balance while Walking in an Unfamiliar Environment: a Pilot Study. (Q45824085) (← links)
- Time to disengage: holding an object influences the execution of rapid compensatory reach-to-grasp reactions for recovery from whole-body instability. (Q46038193) (← links)
- The contribution of light touch sensory cues to corrective reactions during treadmill locomotion. (Q46193320) (← links)
- Control of vertical posture while standing on a sliding board and pushing an object (Q47197630) (← links)
- Role of point of application of perturbation in control of vertical posture (Q47755930) (← links)
- Parallels in control of voluntary and perturbation-evoked reach-to-grasp movements: EMG and kinematics. (Q48175182) (← links)
- External postural perturbations induce multiple anticipatory postural adjustments when subjects cannot pre-select their stepping foot (Q48376473) (← links)
- Reaching to recover balance in unpredictable circumstances: is online visual control of the reach-to-grasp reaction necessary or sufficient? (Q48617934) (← links)
- The effect of three different types of walking aids on spatio-temporal gait parameters in community-dwelling older adults. (Q53600693) (← links)
- Where do we look when we walk on stairs? Gaze behaviour on stairs, transitions, and handrails (Q54147039) (← links)
- Does perturbation-based balance training prevent falls among individuals with chronic stroke? A randomised controlled trial (Q58769936) (← links)
- Initiation of rapid reach-and-grasp balance reactions: is a pre-formed visuospatial map used in controlling the initial arm trajectory? (Q76383712) (← links)
- Postural control in response to a perturbation: role of vision and additional support (Q84280713) (← links)
- The effect of light touch on the amplitude of cutaneous reflexes in the arms during treadmill walking (Q87899826) (← links)
- Evaluation of balance recovery stability from unpredictable perturbations through the compensatory arm and leg movements (CALM) scale (Q92956847) (← links)