5 results match your criteria: "University of East LondonLondon[Affiliation]"
Front Hum Neurosci
September 2017
Neuroplasticity and Neurorehabilitation Doctoral Training Programme, Neurorehabilitation Unit, School of Health, Sport and Biosscience, University of East LondonLondon, United Kingdom.
Recent developments in mobile brain-body imaging (MoBI) technologies have enabled studies of human locomotion where subjects are able to move freely in more ecologically valid scenarios. In this study, MoBI was employed to describe the behavioral and neurophysiological aspects of three different commonly occurring walking conditions in healthy adults. The experimental conditions were self-paced walking, walking while conversing with a friend and lastly walking while texting with a smartphone.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Cell Dev Biol
June 2017
School of Health, Sport and Bioscience, University of East LondonLondon, United Kingdom.
Cell size is amenable by genetic and environmental factors. The highly conserved nutrient-responsive Target of Rapamycin (TOR) signaling pathway regulates cellular metabolic status and growth in response to numerous inputs. Timing and duration of TOR pathway activity is pivotal for both cell mass built up as well as cell cycle progression and is controlled and fine-tuned by the abundance and quality of nutrients, hormonal signals, growth factors, stress, and oxygen.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Psychol
March 2017
School of Psychology, University of East London London, UK.
Front Physiol
January 2017
Neuroplasticity and Neurorehabilitation Doctoral Training Programme, Neurorehabilitation Unit, School of Health, Sport and Bioscience, University of East LondonLondon, UK; University College London Partners Centre for NeurorehabilitationLondon, UK.
Adaptation of arm reaching in a novel force field involves co-contraction of upper limb muscles, but it is not known how the co-ordination of multiple muscle activation is orchestrated. We have used intermuscular coherence (IMC) to test whether a coherent intermuscular coupling between muscle pairs is responsible for novel patterns of activation during adaptation of reaching in a force field. Subjects ( = 16) performed reaching trials during a null force field, then during a velocity-dependent force field and then again during a null force field.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Physiol
October 2016
Endurance Research Group, School of Sport and Exercise Sciences, University of Kent Chatham, UK.
The [Formula: see text] slow component ([Formula: see text]) that develops during high-intensity aerobic exercise is thought to be strongly associated with locomotor muscle fatigue. We sought to experimentally test this hypothesis by pre-fatiguing the locomotor muscles used during subsequent high-intensity cycling exercise. Over two separate visits, eight healthy male participants were asked to either perform a non-metabolically stressful 100 intermittent drop-jumps protocol (pre-fatigue condition) or rest for 33 min (control condition) according to a random and counterbalanced order.
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