All Stories

  1. Effects of experimentally induced fatigue on healthy older adults’ gait: A systematic review
  2. Minimal effects of age and prolonged physical and mental exercise on healthy adults’ gait
  3. Force decline after low and high intensity contractions in persons with multiple sclerosis
  4. Age-related changes in brain deactivation but not in activation after motor learning
  5. Self-Reported Fatigue After Mild Traumatic Brain Injury Is Not Associated With Performance Fatigability During a Sustained Maximal Contraction
  6. Cross-education does not improve early and late-phase rehabilitation outcomes after ACL reconstruction: a randomized controlled clinical trial
  7. Somatosensory electrical stimulation improves skill acquisition, consolidation, and transfer by increasing sensorimotor activity and connectivity
  8. Age- and Sex-Related Differences in Motor Performance During Sustained Maximal Voluntary Contraction of the First Dorsal Interosseous
  9. Cross-education does not accelerate the rehabilitation of neuromuscular functions after ACL reconstruction: a randomized controlled clinical trial
  10. Racing an Opponent: Alteration of Pacing, Performance, and Muscle-Force Decline but Not Rating of Perceived Exertion
  11. The Assessment of Motor Fatigability in Persons With Multiple Sclerosis: A Systematic Review
  12. Fatigue, Sleep Disturbances, and Their Influence on Quality of Life in Cervical Dystonia Patients
  13. Fatigue and Fatigability in Persons With Multiple Sclerosis
  14. Neuronal mechanisms of motor learning are age dependent
  15. An anterior cruciate ligament injury does not affect the neuromuscular function of the non-injured leg except for dynamic balance and voluntary quadriceps activation
  16. Knee jerk responses in infants at high risk for cerebral palsy: an observational EMG study
  17. Pacing Strategy, Muscle Fatigue, and Technique in 1500-m Speed-Skating and Cycling Time Trials
  18. Motor Skill Acquisition and Retention after Somatosensory Electrical Stimulation in Healthy Humans
  19. Reduced Muscle Activation during Sustained but not during Brief Maximal Voluntary Contractions in the First Dorsal Interosseous Weakened by Spinal Cord Injury
  20. Direct and crossed effects of somatosensory electrical stimulation on motor learning and neuronal plasticity in humans
  21. Reduced Voluntary Activation During Brief and Sustained Contractions of a Hand Muscle in Secondary-Progressive Multiple Sclerosis Patients
  22. Neuronal mechanisms of motor learning and motor memory consolidation in healthy old adults
  23. Muscle Fatigability During a Sustained Index Finger Abduction and Depression Scores Are Associated With Perceived Fatigue in Patients With Relapsing-Remitting Multiple Sclerosis
  24. Weight dependent modulation of motor resonance induced by weight estimation during observation of partially occluded lifting actions
  25. Motor unit firing rates during spasms in thenar muscles of spinal cord injured subjects
  26. Direct and crossed effects of somatosensory stimulation on neuronal excitability and motor performance in humans
  27. Reduced Dual-Task Performance in MS Patients Is Further Decreased by Muscle Fatigue
  28. Increased reaction times and reduced response preparation already starts at middle age
  29. Increased Bilateral Interactions in Middle-Aged Subjects
  30. Human spinal cord injury: motor unit properties and behaviour
  31. Mirror training to augment cross-education during resistance training: a hypothesis
  32. Firing patterns of spontaneously active motor units in spinal cord‐injured subjects
  33. Mechanisms underlying muscle fatigue differ between multiple sclerosis patients and controls: A combined electrophysiological and neuroimaging study
  34. Do Additional Inputs Change Maximal Voluntary Motor Unit Firing Rates After Spinal Cord Injury?
  35. Fatigue Perceived by Multiple Sclerosis Patients Is Associated With Muscle Fatigue
  36. PTMS54 Modulation of corticospinal excitability during ipsilateral contractions
  37. P6.12 The relation between sense of fatigue and fatigability in patients with multiple sclerosis
  38. Corticospinal excitability during observation and imagery of simple and complex hand tasks: Implications for motor rehabilitation
  39. Secondary sensory area SII is crucially involved in the preparation of familiar movements compared to movements never made before
  40. Inadvertent Contralateral Activity during a Sustained Unilateral Contraction Reflects the Direction of Target Movement
  41. Contralateral muscle activity and fatigue in the human first dorsal interosseous muscle
  42. Voluntary activation and cortical activity during a sustained maximal contraction: An fMRI study
  43. MR compatible strain gauge based force transducer
  44. Effects of motor fatigue on human brain activity, an fMRI study
  45. Relation between muscle and brain activity during isometric contractions of the first dorsal interosseus muscle
  46. Reduced cortical activity during maximal bilateral contractions of the index finger
  47. The origin of activity in the biceps brachii muscle during voluntary contractions of the contralateral elbow flexor muscles
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  49. Free Communication/Poster – Gait and Musculoskeletal Mechanics
  50. Interaction between force production and cognitive performance in humans
  51. Surface EMG measurements during fMRI at 3T: Accurate EMG recordings after artifact correction
  52. Fatigue of muscles weakened by death of motoneurons
  53. The effect of caffeine on cognitive task performance and motor fatigue
  54. Increased blood pressure can reduce fatigue of thenar muscles paralyzed after spinal cord injury
  55. Effects of imagery motor training on torque production of ankle plantar flexor muscles
  56. Motor Unit Firing During and After Voluntary Contractions of Human Thenar Muscles Weakened by Spinal Cord Injury
  57. Motor fatigue and cognitive task performance in humans
  58. Motor unit activation order during electrically evoked contractions of paralyzed or partially paralyzed muscles
  59. Patterns of Pathological Firing in Human Motor Units
  60. Spontaneous motor unit behavior in human thenar muscles after spinal cord injury
  61. Spontaneous motor unit behavior in human thenar muscles after spinal cord injury
  62. Muscle fatigue induced by stimulation with and without doublets
  63. Potentiating and fatiguing cortical reactions in a voluntary fatigue test of a human hand muscle
  64. Muscle fatigue induced by stimulation with and without doublets
  65. Fatigue-associated changes in the electromyogram of the human first dorsal interosseous muscle
  66. Fatigue‐associated changes in the electromyogram of the human first dorsal interosseous muscle
  67. Influence of a voluntary fatigue test on the contralateral homologous muscle in humans?
  68. Task-related variations in motoneuronal drive to a human intrinsic hand muscle
  69. Spatial differences in fatigue-associated electromyographic behaviour of the human first dorsal interosseus muscle.
  70. Fatigue associated EMG behavior of the first dorsal interosseous and adductor pollicis muscles in different groups of subjects
  71. Electromyogram and force during stimulated fatigue tests of muscles in dominant and non-dominant hands