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Neuroscience

D-Index
43
Citations
6494
World Ranking
7437
National Ranking
569

Overview

Steve A. Edgley is affiliated with the University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom. Their research focuses primarily on areas that intersect neuroscience and engineering, contributing especially to neurology and biomedical engineering.

The main fields of study in which they have published include:

  • Neuroscience
  • Engineering

More specifically, their work covers subfields such as:

  • Neurology
  • Biomedical Engineering
  • Cognitive Neuroscience
  • Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience

Edgley's research topics address several key areas of neuroscience and neuroengineering, including:

  • Muscle activation and electromyography studies
  • Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation Studies
  • Motor Control and Adaptation
  • Neuroscience and Neural Engineering
  • Neurological disorders and treatments

Their recent publications reflect this focus, featuring mainly work published in the Journal of Neuroscience:

  • Extensive Cortical Convergence to Primate Reticulospinal Pathways, 2020, Journal of Neuroscience
  • Spatial and Temporal Arrangement of Recurrent Inhibition in the Primate Upper Limb, 2020, Journal of Neuroscience

Frequent collaborators in their research include:

  • Stuart N. Baker
  • Karen M. Fisher
  • Boubker Zaaimi
  • Elizabeth R. Williams

The concentration of publications in the Journal of Neuroscience indicates a consistent engagement with one of the primary venues for research in the field. Their work appears to contribute to ongoing discussions in understanding neural pathways and mechanisms related to motor control and inhibition in primates.

Best Publications

  • Changes in descending motor pathway connectivity after corticospinal tract lesion in macaque monkey.

    Boubker Zaaimi;Steve A. Edgley;Demetris S. Soteropoulos;Stuart N. Baker

  • An interneuronal relay for group I and II muscle afferents in the midlumbar segments of the cat spinal cord.

    S A Edgley;E Jankowska

  • Direct and Indirect Connections with Upper Limb Motoneurons from the Primate Reticulospinal Tract

    C. N. Riddle;S. A. Edgley;S. N. Baker

  • Excitation of the corticospinal tract by electromagnetic and electrical stimulation of the scalp in the macaque monkey

    S A Edgley;J A Eyre;R N Lemon;S Miller

  • Comparison of activation of corticospinal neurons and spinal motor neurons by magnetic and electrical transcranial stimulation in the lumbosacral cord of the anaesthetized monkey.

    S A Edgley;J A Eyre;R N Lemon;S Miller

  • Post-synaptic actions of midlumbar interneurones on motoneurones of hind-limb muscles in the cat.

    P Cavallari;S A Edgley;E Jankowska

  • How Can Corticospinal Tract Neurons Contribute to Ipsilateral Movements? A Question With Implications for Recovery of Motor Functions

    Elzbieta Jankowska;Stephen A. Edgley

  • Postnatal Development of Corticospinal Projections from Motor Cortex to the Cervical Enlargement in the Macaque Monkey

    J Armand;Etienne Olivier;S A Edgley;R N Lemon

  • Evidence that mid-lumbar neurones in reflex pathways from group II afferents are involved in locomotion in the cat.

    S A Edgley;E Jankowska;S Shefchyk

  • Discharges of Purkinje cells in the paravermal part of the cerebellar anterior lobe during locomotion in the cat.

    D M Armstrong;S A Edgley

  • Neuronal Basis of Crossed Actions from the Reticular Formation on Feline Hindlimb Motoneurons

    Elzbieta Jankowska;Ingela Hammar;Urszula Slawinska;Katarzyna Maleszak

  • An Electrophysiological Study of the Postnatal Development of the Corticospinal System in the Macaque Monkey

    Etienne Olivier;Steve A. Edgley;Jean Armand;Roger N. Lemon

  • Field potentials generated by group II muscle afferents in the middle lumbar segments of the cat spinal cord.

    S A Edgley;E Jankowska

  • Different responses of rat cerebellar Purkinje cells and Golgi cells evoked by widespread convergent sensory inputs.

    Tahl Holtzman;Thimali Rajapaksa;Abteen Mostofi;Steve A. Edgley

  • Networks of inhibitory and excitatory commissural interneurons mediating crossed reticulospinal actions

    B. Anne Bannatyne;Stephen A. Edgley;Ingela Hammar;Elzbieta Jankowska

  • A short-latency crossed pathway from cutaneous afferents to rat hindlimb motoneurones.

    S A Edgley;N A Wallace

  • Functional subdivision of feline spinal interneurons in reflex pathways from group Ib and II muscle afferents; an update.

    Elzbieta Jankowska;Steve A. Edgley

  • Pathways mediating functional recovery

    Stuart N. Baker;Boubker Zaaimi;Karen M. Fisher;Steve A. Edgley

  • Discharges of nucleus interpositus neurones during locomotion in the cat.

    D M Armstrong;S A Edgley

  • The discharges of cerebellar Golgi cells during locomotion in the cat.

    S A Edgley;M Lidierth

  • Electrophysiological Localization of Eyeblink-Related Microzones in Rabbit Cerebellar Cortex

    Abteen Mostofi;Tahl Holtzman;Amanda S. Grout;Christopher H. Yeo

Frequent Co-Authors

Elzbieta Jankowska
Elzbieta Jankowska University of Gothenburg
Stuart N. Baker
Stuart N. Baker Newcastle University
Etienne Olivier
Etienne Olivier Université Catholique de Louvain
Roger N. Lemon
Roger N. Lemon University College London
Troy W. Margrie
Troy W. Margrie University College London
Christopher H. Yeo
Christopher H. Yeo University College London
Simon C. Gandevia
Simon C. Gandevia Neuroscience Research Australia
Carl-Fredrik Ekerot
Carl-Fredrik Ekerot Lund University
Dora E. Angelaki
Dora E. Angelaki New York University
Henrik Jörntell
Henrik Jörntell Lund University

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