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  1. Corticomuscular and intermuscular coherence as a function of age and walking balance difficulty
  2. Walking on a Balance Beam as a New Measure of Dynamic Balance to Predict Falls in Older Adults and Patients with Neurological Conditions
  3. Age, Cognitive Task, and Arm Position Differently Affect Muscle Synergy Recruitment but have Similar Effects on Walking Balance
  4. Three days of beam walking practice improves dynamic balance control regardless of the use of haptic anchors in older adults
  5. Beam width and arm position but not cognitive task affect walking balance in older adults
  6. Older adults reduce the complexity and efficiency of neuromuscular control to preserve walking balance
  7. Trunk balance control during beam walking improves with the haptic anchors without the interference of an auditory-cognitive task in older adults
  8. Effect of lower limb dominance on walking adaptations in young adults when stepping into a hole
  9. The Critical Point to Step into a Hole is Similar in Young and Older Adults
  10. Effect of a cognitive task on online adjustments when avoiding stepping on an obstacle and stepping on a target during walking in young adults
  11. Task difficulty has no effect on haptic anchoring during tandem walking in young and older adults
  12. Haptic information provided by the “anchor system” reduces trunk sway acceleration in the frontal plane during tandem walking in older adults
  13. Postural alignment in children with Duchenne muscular dystrophy and its relationship with balance
  14. Effects of age and task difficulty on neuromuscular and corticomuscular determinants of walking balance