Brain–Computer Interfaces von Cesar Marquez-Chin | Neurorehabilitation of Voluntary Movement after Stroke and Spinal Cord Injury | ISBN 9783031004803

Brain–Computer Interfaces

Neurorehabilitation of Voluntary Movement after Stroke and Spinal Cord Injury

von Cesar Marquez-Chin, Naaz Kapadia-Desai und Sukhvinder Kalsi-Ryan
Mitwirkende
Autor / AutorinCesar Marquez-Chin
Autor / AutorinNaaz Kapadia-Desai
Autor / AutorinSukhvinder Kalsi-Ryan
Buchcover Brain–Computer Interfaces | Cesar Marquez-Chin | EAN 9783031004803 | ISBN 3-031-00480-9 | ISBN 978-3-031-00480-3

Brain–Computer Interfaces

Neurorehabilitation of Voluntary Movement after Stroke and Spinal Cord Injury

von Cesar Marquez-Chin, Naaz Kapadia-Desai und Sukhvinder Kalsi-Ryan
Mitwirkende
Autor / AutorinCesar Marquez-Chin
Autor / AutorinNaaz Kapadia-Desai
Autor / AutorinSukhvinder Kalsi-Ryan
Stroke and spinal cord injury often result in paralysis with serious negative consequences to the independence and quality of life of those who sustain them. For these individuals, rehabilitation provides the means to regain lost function. Rehabilitation following neurological injuries has undergone revolutionary changes, enriched by neuroplasticity. Neuroplastic-based interventions enhance the efficacy and continue to guide the development of new rehabilitation strategies. This book presents three important technology-based rehabilitation interventions that follow the concepts of neuroplasticity. The book also discusses clinical results related to their efficacy. These interventions are: functional electrical stimulation therapy, which produces coordinated muscle contractions allowing people with paralysis to perform functional movements with rich sensory feedback; robot-assisted therapy, which uses robots to assist, resist, and guide movements with increased intensity while also reducing the physical burden on therapists; and brain–computer interfaces, which make it possible to verify the presence of motor-related brain activity during rehabilitation. Further, the book presents the combined use of these three technologies to illustrate some of the emerging approaches to the neurorehabilitation of voluntary movement. The authors share their practical experiences obtained during the development and clinical testing of functional electrical stimulation therapy controlled by a brain–computer interface as an intervention to restore reaching and grasping.