All Relations between aftereffects and asymmetrical neuron

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
Kendra M Cherry-Allen, Han D Huang, Pablo A Celnik, Amy J Bastia. Serial engagement of distinct motor learning mechanisms to alter walking after stroke. Scientific reports. vol 14. issue 1. 2024-10-01. PMID:39349923. adaptation involved split-belt treadmill walking to produce after-effects that reduce step asymmetry. 2024-10-01 2024-10-03 human
Reuben N Addison, Arend W A Van Gemmer. Bilateral Transfer of a Visuomotor Task in Different Workspace Configurations. Journal of motor behavior. 2023-12-18. PMID:38108224. we observed an asymmetric transfer of pathlength (left to right) but no ensuing after-effect. 2023-12-18 2023-12-21 Not clear
Xin Sun, Longhui Zhang, Qitian Sun, Ping Ye, Wei Hao, Peizhuo Shi, Yongxiang Don. Anti-Penetration Performance of Composite Structures with Metal-Packaged Ceramic Interlayer and UHMWPE Laminate. Materials (Basel, Switzerland). vol 16. issue 6. 2023-03-29. PMID:36984352. due to the asymmetric deformation and high elastic recovery ability of the uhmwpe laminate, the projectile trajectory deflection is increased, and the broken ceramic fragments are restrained, thereby mitigating after-effect damage caused by the projectile after penetrating the structure. 2023-03-29 2023-08-14 Not clear
Sungwoo Park, James M Finle. Manual stabilization reveals a transient role for balance control during locomotor adaptation. Journal of neurophysiology. 2022-08-10. PMID:35946807. holding on to a handrail reduced the perturbation to asymmetry during the early phase of adaptation and resulted in a smaller after-effect during early post-adaptation. 2022-08-10 2023-08-14 human
Jonathan M Wood, Hyosub E Kim, Margaret A French, Darcy S Reisman, Susanne M Morto. Use-dependent plasticity explains aftereffects in visually guided locomotor learning of a novel step length asymmetry. Journal of neurophysiology. vol 124. issue 1. 2021-07-19. PMID:32432516. use-dependent plasticity explains aftereffects in visually guided locomotor learning of a novel step length asymmetry. 2021-07-19 2023-08-13 human
Jonathan M Wood, Hyosub E Kim, Margaret A French, Darcy S Reisman, Susanne M Morto. Use-dependent plasticity explains aftereffects in visually guided locomotor learning of a novel step length asymmetry. Journal of neurophysiology. vol 124. issue 1. 2021-07-19. PMID:32432516. when feedback was removed, both groups demonstrated aftereffects in the primary outcome, step asymmetry index. 2021-07-19 2023-08-13 human
Jonathan M Wood, Hyosub E Kim, Margaret A French, Darcy S Reisman, Susanne M Morto. Use-dependent plasticity explains aftereffects in visually guided locomotor learning of a novel step length asymmetry. Journal of neurophysiology. vol 124. issue 1. 2021-07-19. PMID:32432516. to further characterize the use-dependent process, we conducted a second experiment to quantify aftereffect size in a third group who practiced double the asymmetry magnitude. 2021-07-19 2023-08-13 human
Tom J W Buurke, Claudine J C Lamoth, Lucas H V van der Woude, Rob den Otte. Handrail Holding During Treadmill Walking Reduces Locomotor Learning in Able-Bodied Persons. IEEE transactions on neural systems and rehabilitation engineering : a publication of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society. vol 27. issue 9. 2020-05-26. PMID:31425041. the results showed that holding handrails during split-belt adaptation reduces magnitude of initial perturbation of step length asymmetry and reduces after-effects in step length asymmetry upon return to symmetric belt speeds. 2020-05-26 2023-08-13 human
Pranathi Chunduru, Seung-Jae Kim, Hyunglae Le. Gait symmetric adaptation: Comparing effects of implicit visual distortion versus split-belt treadmill on aftereffects of adapted step length symmetry. Human movement science. vol 66. 2019-07-29. PMID:31063927. after adaptation, the visual feedback or the split-belt perturbation was removed while subjects continued walking, and aftereffects of preserved asymmetric pattern were assessed. 2019-07-29 2023-08-13 human
Victoria Kuczynski, Alessandro Telonio, Yann Thibaudier, Marie-France Hurteau, Charline Dambreville, Etienne Desrochers, Adam Doelman, Declan Ross, Alain Frigo. Lack of adaptation during prolonged split-belt locomotion in the intact and spinal cat. The Journal of physiology. vol 595. issue 17. 2018-02-05. PMID:28643899. when returning to tied-belt locomotion, there is an after-effect, with a reversal in the asymmetry observed in the early split-belt period, indicating that the new pattern was stored within the central nervous system. 2018-02-05 2023-08-13 cat
Sarah Maeve Cooney, Alanna O'Shea, Nuala Brad. Point Me in the Right Direction: Same and Cross Category Visual Aftereffects to Directional Cues. PloS one. vol 10. issue 10. 2016-06-15. PMID:26509881. the considerable cross category adaptation found when arrows were used as adapting stimuli and the asymmetry in aftereffects to left and right hands suggests that the adaptation aftereffects are likely driven by simple orientation cues, inherent in the morphological structure of the hand, and not dependent on the biological status of the hand pointing cue. 2016-06-15 2023-08-13 human
Hiromi Sato, Isamu Motoyoshi, Takao Sat. On-off selectivity and asymmetry in apparent contrast: An adaptation study. Journal of vision. vol 16. issue 1. 2016-05-12. PMID:26790846. results revealed that contrast aftereffects are selective for luminance polarity (polarity selectivity) but that adaptation aftereffects occur asymmetrically depending on the polarity of the adapter (polarity asymmetry). 2016-05-12 2023-08-13 Not clear
Hiromi Sato, Isamu Motoyoshi, Takao Sat. On-off selectivity and asymmetry in apparent contrast: An adaptation study. Journal of vision. vol 16. issue 1. 2016-05-12. PMID:26790846. polarity selectivity and asymmetry in adaptation aftereffects are reduced but not completely diminished if adapter and test stimuli are presented to separate eyes (dichoptically). 2016-05-12 2023-08-13 Not clear
E S Malinin. [Asymmetry and spatial specificity of auditory aftereffects following adaptation to signals simulating approach and withdrawal of sound sources]. Zhurnal evoliutsionnoi biokhimii i fiziologii. vol 50. issue 5. 2015-04-24. PMID:25786320. [asymmetry and spatial specificity of auditory aftereffects following adaptation to signals simulating approach and withdrawal of sound sources]. 2015-04-24 2023-08-13 human
E S Malinin. [Asymmetry and spatial specificity of auditory aftereffects following adaptation to signals simulating approach and withdrawal of sound sources]. Zhurnal evoliutsionnoi biokhimii i fiziologii. vol 50. issue 5. 2015-04-24. PMID:25786320. the data summarized for all 8 participants indicated that the asymmetry of approaching and withdrawing aftereffects depended on spatial localization of adaptor and test. 2015-04-24 2023-08-13 human
E S Malinin. [Asymmetry and spatial specificity of auditory aftereffects following adaptation to signals simulating approach and withdrawal of sound sources]. Zhurnal evoliutsionnoi biokhimii i fiziologii. vol 50. issue 5. 2015-04-24. PMID:25786320. the asymmetry of aftereffects was largest when adaptor and test were presented from the same loudspeaker (either near or far). 2015-04-24 2023-08-13 human
Kristin V Huynh, Carolina H Sarmento, Ryan T Roemmich, Elizabeth L Stegemöller, Chris J Has. Comparing aftereffects after split-belt treadmill walking and unilateral stepping. Medicine and science in sports and exercise. vol 46. issue 7. 2015-01-26. PMID:24389526. herein, we compare step length aftereffects during overground gait after two rehabilitation intervention strategies to combat step length asymmetry: split-belt treadmill (sbt) walking and unilateral stepping. 2015-01-26 2023-08-12 Not clear
David P McGovern, Neil W Roach, Ben S Web. Characterizing the effects of multidirectional motion adaptation. Journal of vision. vol 14. issue 13. 2015-01-07. PMID:25368339. sampling of asymmetric gaussian and uniform distributions resulted in shifts of direction aftereffect tuning profiles consistent with changes in the perceived global direction of the adapting stimulus. 2015-01-07 2023-08-13 Not clear
Douglas N Savin, Susanne M Morton, Jill Whital. Generalization of improved step length symmetry from treadmill to overground walking in persons with stroke and hemiparesis. Clinical neurophysiology : official journal of the International Federation of Clinical Neurophysiology. vol 125. issue 5. 2014-06-05. PMID:24286858. determine whether adaptation to a swing phase perturbation during gait transferred from treadmill to overground walking, the rate of overground deadaptation, and whether overground aftereffects improved step length asymmetry in persons with hemiparetic stroke and gait asymmetry. 2014-06-05 2023-08-12 Not clear
Jasmine F Mian, Catherine J Mondloc. Recognizing identity in the face of change: the development of an expression-independent representation of facial identity. Journal of vision. vol 12. issue 7. 2012-11-06. PMID:22847806. perceptual aftereffects have indicated that there is an asymmetry in the extent to which adults' representations of identity and expression are independent of one another. 2012-11-06 2023-08-12 Not clear