Publications by authors named "P H Graham"

Objective: The aim of this study was to describe the demographic and clinical characteristics of patients with scoliosis from Australian primary care practices.

Methods: A retrospective review of 190 patient records from August 2017 to April 2020 from a private Australian clinical advisory service database was performed. Deidentified demographic and clinical data were collated and analyzed, along with information regarding the referring practitioners and any accompanying clinical or paraclinical information.

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Visual navigation is a key capability for robots and animals. Inspired by the navigational prowess of social insects, a family of insect-inspired route navigation algorithms-familiarity-based algorithms-have been developed that use stored panoramic images collected during a training route to subsequently derive directional information during route recapitulation. However, unlike the ants that inspire them, these algorithms ignore the sequence in which the training images are acquired so that all temporal information/correlation is lost.

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Purpose: The Falls After Stroke Trial (FAST) intervention involves habit-forming functional exercise and mobility practice which may increase physical activity. This substudy of FAST explores physical activity in community-dwelling people after stroke comparing the FAST intervention to usual care.

Methods: This study used a subset of 49 participants from a randomised trial.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the role of the nondominant temporal lobe in memory by comparing a spatial memory task (Brown Location Test, BLT) with verbal and visual memory tasks in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE).
  • Results showed that patients with right TLE specifically struggled with the BLT, while those with left TLE had difficulties with both verbal and nonverbal tasks.
  • Combining BLT Delayed Recall and Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Task (RAVLT) scores was found to be the best way to predict the lateralization of the epileptogenic zone, showing the importance of using diverse memory assessments for evaluating epilepsy surgery candidates.
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