» Authors » Pablo A Celnik

Pablo A Celnik

Explore the profile of Pablo A Celnik including associated specialties, affiliations and a list of published articles. Areas
Snapshot
Articles 54
Citations 1742
Followers 0
Related Specialties
Top 10 Co-Authors
Published In
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Recent Articles
31.
Schambra H, Xu J, Branscheidt M, Lindquist M, Uddin J, Steiner L, et al.
Neurorehabil Neural Repair . 2019 Jun; 33(7):568-580. PMID: 31170880
. After stroke, recovery of movement in proximal and distal upper extremity (UE) muscles appears to follow different time courses, suggesting differences in their neural substrates. . We sought to...
32.
Rajan V, Hardwick R, Celnik P
J Neurophysiol . 2019 May; 122(1):60-65. PMID: 31042443
Motor control theories propose that the same motor plans can be employed by different effectors (e.g., the hand and arm). Skills learned with one effector can therefore "transfer" to others,...
33.
Xu J, Branscheidt M, Schambra H, Steiner L, Widmer M, Diedrichsen J, et al.
Ann Neurol . 2019 Feb; 85(4):502-513. PMID: 30805956
Objective: Patients with chronic stroke have been shown to have failure to release interhemispheric inhibition (IHI) from the intact to the damaged hemisphere before movement execution (premovement IHI). This inhibitory...
34.
Ejaz N, Xu J, Branscheidt M, Hertler B, Schambra H, Widmer M, et al.
Brain . 2019 Jan; 142(1):e2. PMID: 30596904
No abstract available.
35.
Liew S, Thompson T, Ramirez J, Butcher P, Taylor J, Celnik P
Front Neurosci . 2018 Oct; 12:610. PMID: 30279645
We routinely make fine motor adjustments to maintain optimal motor performance. These adaptations have been attributed to both implicit, error-based mechanisms, and explicit, strategy-based mechanisms. However, little is known about...
36.
Cherry-Allen K, Statton M, Celnik P, Bastian A
Neurorehabil Neural Repair . 2018 Aug; 32(9):810-820. PMID: 30086670
Background: Gait impairments after stroke arise from dysfunction of one or several features of the walking pattern. Traditional rehabilitation practice focuses on improving one component at a time, which may...
37.
Mawase F, Lopez D, Celnik P, Haith A
Cell Rep . 2018 Jul; 24(4):801-808. PMID: 30044977
Our sensorimotor system appears to be influenced by the recent history of our movements. Repeating movements toward a particular direction is known to have a dramatic effect on involuntary movements...
38.
Ejaz N, Xu J, Branscheidt M, Hertler B, Schambra H, Widmer M, et al.
Brain . 2018 Feb; 141(3):837-847. PMID: 29394326
Following a stroke, mirror movements are unintended movements that appear in the non-paretic hand when the paretic hand voluntarily moves. Mirror movements have previously been linked to overactivation of sensorimotor...
39.
Xu J, Ejaz N, Hertler B, Branscheidt M, Widmer M, Faria A, et al.
J Neurophysiol . 2017 Jun; 118(2):1151-1163. PMID: 28566461
Impaired hand function after stroke is a major cause of long-term disability. We developed a novel paradigm that quantifies two critical aspects of hand function, strength, and independent control of...
40.
Ammann C, Lindquist M, Celnik P
Brain Stimul . 2017 Apr; 10(4):757-763. PMID: 28420581
Background: It is well known that transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) is capable of modulating corticomotor excitability. However, a source of growing concern has been the observed inter- and intra-individual...