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Neuroscience

D-Index
63
Citations
14919
World Ranking
3384
National Ranking
1570

Overview

Howard Poizner is affiliated with the University of California, San Diego in the United States. Their research primarily spans the fields of neuroscience, engineering, and health professions, with specific focus in the subfields of cognitive neuroscience, biomedical engineering, and physical therapy, sports therapy and rehabilitation.

Their work centers around topics such as motor control and adaptation, muscle activation and electromyography studies, and balance, gait, and falls prevention. These areas reflect a multidisciplinary approach combining neurophysiological mechanisms and rehabilitation techniques.

Among the scientific contributions, Howard Poizner has co-authored research on proprioceptive recalibration following implicit visuomotor adaptation in Parkinson's disease. This work was published in 2021 in the journal Experimental Brain Research. The paper addresses the preservation of proprioceptive adjustments in individuals with Parkinson's disease, contributing insights into sensory-motor integration in neurodegenerative conditions.

Frequent collaborators include researchers such as Erin K. Cressman, Danielle Salomonczyk, Alina G. Constantin, Janis M. Miyasaki, and Elena Moro, indicating a collaborative network focused on motor control and neurological disorders.

Publications by Howard Poizner are primarily found in the venue Experimental Brain Research, reflecting engagement with the neuroscience research community interested in brain function, motor control, and rehabilitation.

  • Proprioceptive recalibration following implicit visuomotor adaptation is preserved in Parkinson's disease, 2021, Experimental Brain Research

Best Publications

  • What the hands reveal about the brain

    Howard Poizner;Edward S. Klima;Ursula Bellugi

  • Virtual reality-enhanced stroke rehabilitation

    D. Jack;R. Boian;A.S. Merians;M. Tremaine

  • Virtual Reality–Augmented Rehabilitation for Patients Following Stroke

    Alma S Merians;David Jack;Rares Boian;Marilyn Tremaine

  • Control of limb dynamics in normal subjects and patients without proprioception.

    R. L. Sainburg;M. F. Ghilardi;H. Poizner;C. Ghez

  • Loss of proprioception produces deficits in interjoint coordination

    Robert L. Sainburg;Howard Poizner;Claude Ghez

  • Linking brain, mind and behavior

    Scott Makeig;Klaus Gramann;Tzyy-Ping Jung;Terrence J. Sejnowski;Terrence J. Sejnowski

  • Proprioception and motor control in Parkinson's disease.

    Juergen Konczak;Daniel M. Corcos;Fay Horak;Howard Poizner

  • Sensorimotor training in a virtual reality environment: does it improve functional recovery poststroke?

    Alma S. Merians;Howard Poizner;Rares Boian;Grigore Burdea

  • Deep Brain Stimulation of the Subthalamic Nucleus Alters the Cortical Profile of Response Inhibition in the Beta Frequency Band: A Scalp EEG Study in Parkinson's Disease

    Nicole Swann;Howard Poizner;Melissa Houser;Sherrie Gould

  • Virtual reality-based post-stroke hand rehabilitation.

    R Boian;A Sharma;C Han;A Merians

  • Control of voluntary and reflexive saccades in Parkinson’s disease

    Kevin A. Briand;Daniel Strallow;Wayne Hening;Howard Poizner

  • Language, modality and the brain.

    Ursula Bellugi;Howard Poizner;Edward S. Klima

  • A virtual reality-based exercise system for hand rehabilitation post-stroke

    Sergei V. Adamovich;Alma S. Merians;Rares Boian;Jeffrey A. Lewis

  • Dissociation between linguistic and nonlinguistic gestural systems: a case for compositionality.

    David P. Corina;Howard Poizner;Ursula Bellugi;Todd Feinberg

  • A paradigm shift for rehabilitation robotics

    H. Krebs;L. Dipietro;S. Levy-Tzedek;S. Fasoli

  • Spatial planning deficits in limb apraxia.

    Mary Ann Clark;Alma S. Merians;Abhay Kothari;Howard Poizner

  • Joint coordination deficits in limb apraxia.

    Howard Poizner;MaryAnn Clark;Alma S. Merians;Beth Macauley

  • The interaction of visual and proprioceptive inputs in pointing to actual and remembered targets in Parkinson's disease.

    S.V. Adamovich;M.B. Berkinblit;M.B. Berkinblit;W. Hening;J. Sage

  • Three-dimensional computergraphic analysis of apraxia. Neural representations of learned movement.

    Howard Poizner;Linda Mack;Mieka Verfaellie;Leslie J. Gonzalez Rothi

  • Pointing in 3D Space to Remembered Targets. I. Kinesthetic Versus Visual Target Presentation

    Sergei V. Adamovich;Mendel B. Berkinblit;Mendel B. Berkinblit;Olga Fookson;Howard Poizner

Frequent Co-Authors

Terrence J. Sejnowski
Terrence J. Sejnowski Salk Institute for Biological Studies
Ursula Bellugi
Ursula Bellugi Salk Institute for Biological Studies
Kenneth M. Heilman
Kenneth M. Heilman University of Florida
Eric Halgren
Eric Halgren University of California, San Diego
Gert Cauwenberghs
Gert Cauwenberghs University of California, San Diego
Anatol G. Feldman
Anatol G. Feldman University of Montreal
Leslie J. Gonzalez Rothi
Leslie J. Gonzalez Rothi University of Florida
Daniel M. Corcos
Daniel M. Corcos Northwestern University
Scott Makeig
Scott Makeig University of California, San Diego
Thomas T. Liu
Thomas T. Liu University of California, San Diego

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