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Neuroscience

D-Index
71
Citations
13589
World Ranking
2452
National Ranking
245

Overview

Michael A. Gresty is affiliated with Imperial College London in the United Kingdom. Their research primarily focuses on the fields of Neuroscience and Medicine, with specific emphases in Neurology, Cognitive Neuroscience, Pathology and Forensic Medicine, Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation, and Automotive Engineering.

The scientist's work covers multiple interconnected topics, including vestibular and auditory disorders, visual perception and processing mechanisms, ophthalmology and eye disorders, spatial neglect and hemispheric dysfunction, balance, gait and falls prevention, spatial cognition and navigation, as well as ophthalmology and visual impairment studies.

Michael A. Gresty has contributed to several recent publications, which include:

  • Visual Vertigo, Motion Sickness, and Disorientation in Vehicles (2020), published in Seminars in Neurology
  • Individual Cofactors and Multisensory Contributions to the Postural Sway of Adults with Diabetes (2022), published in Brain Sciences
  • Spatial anxiety contributes to the dizziness-related handicap of adults with peripheral vestibular disease (2024), published in Frontiers in Neurology
  • Vestibular self-motion perception in a patient with bilateral thalamic infarction (2025), published in Journal of Neurology

The scientist frequently collaborates with other researchers such as Kathrine Jáuregui-Renaud, Adolfo M. Bronstein, John F. Golding, Julio César ar Villaseñor-Moreno, and Catalina Aranda-Moreno. These collaborations have resulted in work published in venues like Seminars in Neurology, Brain Sciences, Frontiers in Neurology, and Journal of Neurology.

The combination of fields and topics in Michael A. Gresty's research illustrates a multidisciplinary approach that addresses complex sensory, neurological, and perceptual processes related to vestibular function and associated disorders. The scope of their work spans from basic neuroscience to clinical implications in balance and spatial orientation.

Best Publications

  • Migraine and Ménière's disease: Is there a link?

    A. Radtke;T. Lempert;M.A. Gresty;G.B. Brookes

  • A study of hereditary essential tremor

    P. G. Bain;L. J. Findley;P. D. Thompson;M. A. Gresty

  • Visual vertigo: symptom assessment, spatial orientation and postural control.

    M. Guerraz;L. Yardley;P. Bertholon;L. Pollak

  • Lateropulsion, pushing and verticality perception in hemisphere stroke: a causal relationship?

    D. A. Perennou;G. Mazibrada;V. Chauvineau;R. Greenwood

  • The perception of body verticality (subjective postural vertical) in peripheral and central vestibular disorders.

    A. R. Bisdorff;C. J. Wolsley;D. Anastasopoulos;A. M. Bronstein

  • Ocular tilt reaction with peripheral vestibular lesion

    G M Halmagyi;M A Gresty;W P Gibson

  • Tremor, the cogwheel phenomenon and clonus in Parkinson's disease.

    L J Findley;M A Gresty;G M Halmagyi

  • Primary writing tremor.

    P. G. Bain;L. J. Findley;T. C. Britton;J. C. Rothwell

  • Neural Correlates of Visual-Motion Perception as Object- or Self-motion

    Andreas Kleinschmidt;Kai V Thilo;Christian Büchel;Michael A Gresty

  • Simulator based rehabilitation in refractory dizziness.

    Marousa Pavlou;Ari Lingeswaran;Rosalyn A Davies;Michael A Gresty

  • Bilateral loss of vestibular function: clinical findings in 53 patients

    T. Rinne;A. M. Bronstein;P. Rudge;M. A. Gresty

  • Downbeating nystagmus. A review of 62 cases.

    GM Halmagyi;P Rudge;MA Gresty;Sanders

  • Primary position upbeating nystagmus: a variety of central positional nystagmus

    Anthony Fisher;Michael Gresty;Brian Chambers;Peter Rudge

  • Short latency compensatory eye movement responses to transient linear head acceleration : a specific function of the otolith-ocular reflex

    A. M. Bronstein;M. A. Gresty

  • Predictors of clinical recovery from vestibular neuritis: a prospective study

    Sian Cousins;Diego Kaski;Nicholas Cutfield;Qadeer Arshad

  • Pathophysiology and treatment of motion sickness

    John F. Golding;Michael A. Gresty

  • DISORDERS OF THE VESTIBULO-OCULAR REFLEX PRODUCING OSCILLOPSIA AND MECHANISMS COMPEN ATING FOR LOSS OF LABYRINTHINE FUNCTION

    M. A. Gresty;K. Hess;J. Leech

  • Motorist's vestibular disorientation syndrome.

    N. G. Page;Michael Andrew Gresty

  • NEUROLOGY OF OTOLITH FUNCTION PERIPHERAL AND CENTRAL DISORDERS

    Michael A. Gresty;Adolfo M. Bronstein;Thomas Brandt;Marianne Dieterich

  • Coordination of head and eye movements to fixate continuous and intermittent targets.

    Unknown

  • Eye movement responses to combined linear and angular head movement.

    M. A. Gresty;A. M. Bronstein;H. Barratt

  • Phobic postural vertigo

    A. M. Bronstein;M. A. Gresty;L. M. Luxon;M. A. Ron

Frequent Co-Authors

Lucy Yardley
Lucy Yardley University of Bristol
Richard Greenwood
Richard Greenwood University College London
Charles David Marsden
Charles David Marsden King's College London
Elizabeth A. Grunfeld
Elizabeth A. Grunfeld Birkbeck, University of London
Andreas Kleinschmidt
Andreas Kleinschmidt University of Geneva
Brian L. Day
Brian L. Day University College London
Marjan Jahanshahi
Marjan Jahanshahi University College London
Nilli Lavie
Nilli Lavie University College London
John C. Rothwell
John C. Rothwell University College London
Sylvie Chokron
Sylvie Chokron Université Paris Cité

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