نتایج جستجو برای: hand mirror cell

تعداد نتایج: 1938125  

2011
Gi Jeong Yun Min Ho Chun Ji Young Park Bo Ryun Kim

OBJECTIVE To investigate the synergic effects of mirror therapy and neuromuscular electrical stimulation (NMES) for hand function in stroke patients. METHOD Sixty patients with hemiparesis after stroke were included (41 males and 19 females, average age 63.3 years). Twenty patients had NMES applied and simultaneously underwent mirror therapy. Twenty patients had NMES applied only, and twenty ...

2011
Wataru Tominaga Jun Matsubayashi Makiko Furuya Masao Matsuhashi Tatsuya Mima Hidenao Fukuyama Akira Mitani

Mirror therapy is an effective technique for pain relief and motor function recovery. It has been demonstrated that magnetic 20-Hz activity is induced in the primary motor cortex (M1) after median nerve stimulation and that the amount of the stimulus-induced 20-Hz activity is decreased when the M1 is activated. In the present study, we investigated how the image or the mirror reflection of a ha...

2015
Christopher Milde Mariela Rance Pinar Kirsch Jörg Trojan Xaver Fuchs Jens Foell Robin Bekrater-Bodmann Herta Flor Martin Diers Maurice Ptito

Since its original proposal, mirror therapy has been established as a successful neurorehabilitative intervention in several neurological disorders to recover motor function or to relieve pain. Mirror therapy seems to operate by reactivating the contralesional representation of the non-mirrored limb in primary motor- and somatosensory cortex. However, mirror boxes have some limitations which pr...

2011
Marco Bertamini

In the rubber hand illusion (RHI) one's hand is hidden, and a fake hand is visible. We explored the situation in which visual information was available indirectly in a mirror. In the mirror condition, compared to the standard condition (fake hand visible directly), we found no reduction of the RHI following synchronised stimulation, as measured by crossmanual pointing and by a questionnaire. We...

Journal: :The European journal of neuroscience 2008
Caroline Catmur Helge Gillmeister Geoffrey Bird Roman Liepelt Marcel Brass Cecilia Heyes

The mirror system, comprising cortical areas that allow the actions of others to be represented in the observer's own motor system, is thought to be crucial for the development of social cognition in humans. Despite the importance of the human mirror system, little is known about its origins. We investigated the role of sensorimotor experience in the development of the mirror system. Functional...

Journal: :Neurorehabilitation and neural repair 2015
Holly E Rossiter Mimi R Borrelli Robin J Borchert David Bradbury Nick S Ward

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE Mirror therapy is a new form of stroke rehabilitation that uses the mirror reflection of the unaffected hand in place of the affected hand to augment movement training. The mechanism of mirror therapy is not known but is thought to involve changes in cerebral organization. We used magnetoencephalography (MEG) to measure changes in cortical activity during mirror trainin...

Journal: :CytoJournal 2006
Richard Siderits Janusz Godyn Dearon Tufankjian Osman Ouattara

BACKGROUND Cells with "hand mirror" morphology have not, to the best of our knowledge, been described in a primary effusion sample. This paper describes a case of T-cell lymphoma with eosinophilia in a patient with suspected peritoneal carcinomatosis. Rarely, a T-cell lymphoproliferative process may mimic primary peritoneal carcinomatosis, clinically suggested by a presentation in CT imaging of...

2015
Sandy L. Gonzalez Eliza L. Nelson

Between 4 and 7 months of age, infants begin to manipulate objects using role-differentiated bimanual manipulation (RDBM) where one hand stabilizes an object while the other hand manipulates the object (Rochat, 1989; Kimmerle et al., 1995, 2010). Because RDBM constrains the roles of the hands, it elicits a measurable asymmetry where the manipulating hand is considered to be the preferred hand f...

Journal: :Journal of neurophysiology 2015
Tjerk Zult Stuart Goodall Kevin Thomas Tibor Hortobágyi Glyn Howatson

Forceful, unilateral contractions modulate corticomotor paths targeting the resting, contralateral hand. However, it is unknown whether mirror-viewing of a slowly moving but forcefully contracting hand would additionally affect these paths. Here we examined corticospinal excitability and short-interval intracortical inhibition (SICI) of the right-ipsilateral primary motor cortex (M1) in healthy...

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