Bilateral extracephalic transcranial direct current stimulation improves endurance performance in healthy individuals (Dr Luca Angius, Dr Lex Mauger, Dr James Hopker, and Professor Samule Marcora, University of Kent, with Professor Alvaro Pascual - Leone, Berenson - Allen Center for Non-Invasive Brain Stimulation, Division of Cognitive Neurology, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and Dr Emiliano Santarnecch, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA) is published in
the journal Brain Stimulation.
A report on the treatment is published in
the journal Brain Stimulation.
Not exact matches
The results, describing an effective network profile of deep
brain stimulation has been reported in the
journal Annals of Neurology.
George is referring to his role as editor - in - chief of
Brain Stimulation, a journal launched three years ago to cover the growing list of technologies that can alter the brain's electrical acti
Brain Stimulation, a
journal launched three years ago to cover the growing list of technologies that can alter the
brain's electrical acti
brain's electrical activity.
«Our study suggests that direct current
stimulation can compensate somewhat for the loss of dopamine by decreasing the effort the
brain has to put into getting its motor neurons to fire,» adds Shadmehr, the senior author of a report on the research published online in The
Journal of Neuroscience on Sept. 2.
People prone to seeking
stimulation and acting impulsively may have differences in the structure of their
brains according to a study published in the April 6 issue of The
Journal of Neuroscience.
In a new study, published online Dec. 15 in the
journal Current Biology, the researchers show for the first time that
brain stimulation of specific neurons at a specific frequency can improve timing in mice that are missing dopamine.
Four young men who have been paralyzed for years achieved groundbreaking progress — moving their legs — as a result of epidural electrical
stimulation of the spinal cord, an international team of life scientists at the University of Louisville, UCLA and the Pavlov Institute of Physiology reported today in the medical
journal Brain.
A new study authored by Marc Schieber, M.D., Ph.D., and Kevin Mazurek, Ph.D. with the University of Rochester Medical Center Department of Neurology and the Del Monte Institute for Neuroscience, which appears in the
journal Neuron, shows that very low levels of electrical
stimulation delivered directly to an area of the
brain responsible for motor function can instruct an appropriate response or action, essentially replacing the signals we would normally receive from the parts of the
brain that process what we hear, see, and feel.
Writing in the
Journal Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience, one group of researchers argued that ««non-invasive»
brain stimulation» may sound benign, but it comes with risks as severe as when a body is opened up in surgery.
A new
journal publication released this month in Nature Science Reports, «Highly Stable Glassy Carbon Interfaces for Long - Term Neural
Stimulation and Low - Noise Recording of
Brain Activity» features the recent progress in this research.