Audiocue walking study
[
- Size
- 32.0 GB
- Version
- v1.0.0
- Updated
- Jul 10, 2026
100 results for "neurophysiological alterations" · page 4 of 10 · ranked by relevance
[ collected from 9 adult burn patients in an intensive care unit during Music-Assisted Relaxation therapy sessions. As part of a randomized clinical trial (NCT04571255), participants underwent two recording sessions with pre-intervention baseline, intervention, and post-intervention phases. The study investigates the physiological effects of music therapy on pain perception and anxiety-depression levels in critically ill burn patients using clinical-grade equipment with standardized electrode montages.
…is divided in 64 sequences. Neurophysiological markers and behavioural information is obtained…
This dataset comprises electrocorticography (ECoG) recordings from 20 C57BL/6 mice exposed to combinations of diagnostic ultrasound (tDUS) and visual stimuli to investigate how transcranially delivered ultrasound modulates visual cortex responses. Recordings from visual and somatosensory cortices were collected at 20 kS/s during three experimental conditions: light-only, ultrasound-only, and combined ultrasound with light stimulation. The study demonstrates that tDUS enhances exogenously induced brain activity when combined with visual stimuli, with implications for understanding ultrasound-mediated neuromodulation.
[ dataset investigates neuronal mechanisms underlying exercise-induced hypoalgesia in endurance athletes versus non-athletes. Twenty-two athletes and twenty non-athletes performed high-intensity interval training (HIIT) while brain oxygenation was monitored across pain-processing regions including the prefrontal cortex, sensorimotor cortices, and posterior parietal cortex. The study reveals distinct neural activation patterns and pain reduction responses between groups, with athletes demonstrating greater oxyhemoglobin increases in the posterior parietal cortex during exercise and significant post-HIIT decreases in pain perception correlated with prefrontal cortex deactivation.