Pages that link to "Q34358373"
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The following pages link to Can prepared responses be stored subcortically? (Q34358373):
Displaying 50 items.
- Preparedness for landing after a self-initiated fall (Q30224490) (← links)
- Fractionation of muscle activity in rapid responses to startling cues (Q30359068) (← links)
- Degraded expression of learned feedforward control in movements released by startle. (Q30377599) (← links)
- Accessory stimulus modulates executive function during stepping task. (Q30380371) (← links)
- Neural processes mediating the preparation and release of focal motor output are suppressed or absent during imagined movement (Q30384113) (← links)
- Long-Latency Feedback Coordinates Upper-Limb and Hand Muscles during Object Manipulation Tasks. (Q30387511) (← links)
- A broadband acoustic stimulus is more likely than a pure tone to elicit a startle reflex and prepared movements (Q30403015) (← links)
- Deficits in startle-evoked arm movements increase with impairment following stroke (Q30405628) (← links)
- Cortical involvement in the StartReact effect (Q30409830) (← links)
- Responses to startling acoustic stimuli indicate that movement-related activation is constant prior to action: a replication with an alternate interpretation (Q30414072) (← links)
- Startle evoked movement is delayed in older adults: implications for brainstem processing in the elderly (Q30424709) (← links)
- Startling speech: eliciting prepared speech using startling auditory stimulus (Q30428721) (← links)
- Evidence for reticulospinal contributions to coordinated finger movements in humans (Q30429826) (← links)
- Subcortical structures in humans can be facilitated by transcranial direct current stimulation (Q30430451) (← links)
- Instruction-dependent modulation of the long-latency stretch reflex is associated with indicators of startle (Q30431795) (← links)
- Early and unintentional release of planned motor actions during motor cortical preparation. (Q30454749) (← links)
- A loud auditory stimulus overcomes voluntary movement limitation in cervical dystonia (Q30462341) (← links)
- A block to pre-prepared movement in gait freezing, relieved by pedunculopontine nucleus stimulation (Q30475049) (← links)
- Motor preparation is modulated by the resolution of the response timing information (Q30476128) (← links)
- Differential effects of startle on reaction time for finger and arm movements. (Q30484365) (← links)
- Control strategies to re-establish glenohumeral stability after shoulder injury (Q35061855) (← links)
- Interaction between startle and voluntary reactions in humans. (Q37155572) (← links)
- Triggering prepared actions by sudden sounds: reassessing the evidence for a single mechanism (Q38628052) (← links)
- Postural responses to unexpected perturbations of balance during reaching (Q40758025) (← links)
- Startle reveals decreased response preparatory activation during a stop-signal task (Q41002386) (← links)
- Pause time alters the preparation of two-component movements. (Q44160548) (← links)
- Proprioceptive reaction times and long-latency reflexes in humans (Q47414657) (← links)
- Foreknowledge of an impending startling stimulus does not affect the proportion of startle reflexes or latency of StartReact responses. (Q47644863) (← links)
- Reticulospinal Contributions to Gross Hand Function after Human Spinal Cord Injury (Q47778097) (← links)
- Mechanical perturbations can elicit triggered reactions in the absence of a startle response (Q47963588) (← links)
- Fast visuomotor processing made faster by sound (Q48094202) (← links)
- Reduced motor preparation during dual-task performance: evidence from startle (Q48152933) (← links)
- Unilateral reaction time task is delayed during contralateral movements (Q48197492) (← links)
- Response preparation and execution during intentional bimanual pattern switching (Q48206928) (← links)
- More gain less pain: balance control learning shifts the activation patterns of leg and neck muscles and increases muscular parsimony (Q48218973) (← links)
- Unified nature of bimanual movements revealed by separating the preparation of each arm. (Q48242524) (← links)
- Rapid feedback responses are flexibly coordinated across arm muscles to support goal-directed reaching (Q48339465) (← links)
- Investigation of timing preparation during response initiation and execution using a startling acoustic stimulus (Q48361359) (← links)
- Obstacle avoidance to elicit freezing of gait during treadmill walking (Q48398833) (← links)
- Defective sensorimotor integration in preparation for reaction time tasks in patients with multiple sclerosis (Q48423900) (← links)
- Startle produces early response latencies that are distinct from stimulus intensity effects. (Q48460519) (← links)
- Temporal uncertainty does not affect response latencies of movements produced during startle reactions (Q48588555) (← links)
- Response preparation changes during practice of an asynchronous bimanual movement (Q48648625) (← links)
- Excitability of the pathways mediating the startle reaction before execution of a voluntary movement (Q48704989) (← links)
- Startle decreases reaction time to active inhibition (Q48802132) (← links)
- Default motor preparation under conditions of response uncertainty. (Q48842362) (← links)
- Motor preparation in an anticipation-timing task (Q49048392) (← links)
- Response preparation changes following practice of an asymmetrical bimanual movement (Q49133576) (← links)
- Modulation of EMG-EMG Coherence in a Choice Stepping Task. (Q50319698) (← links)
- An ERP study of cognitive architecture and the insertion of mental processes: Donders revisited (Q51812909) (← links)