Search
Skip to Search Results- 22Walking
- 7Physical activity
- 7Spinal cord injury
- 5Functional electrical stimulation
- 4Active living
- 3Balance
- 6Alberta Centre for Active Living
- 2Johnson, Jeffrey A.
- 2McGetrick, Jennifer Ann
- 2Nykiforuk, Candace I.J.
- 1Alvarado, Laura
- 1Aoyagi, Yukitoshi
- 14Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies (GPS), Faculty of
- 14Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies (GPS), Faculty of/Theses and Dissertations
- 6Alberta Centre for Active Living
- 3Alberta Centre for Active Living/WellSpring
- 3School of Public Health
- 2Alberta Centre for Active Living/Research Update (Alberta Centre for Active Living)
-
Spring 2019
Walking is a locomotor task that integrates information from all over the nervous system. The lumbosacral spinal cord houses neural networks that contribute to locomotion. These networks dominate locomotor activity during development and may provide suitable targets for restoring function after...
-
Middle-Aged and Older Adult Walking and Hiking Groups of Cochrane, Alberta: How Outdoor Group Exercise Influences Perceptions of Health, Healing, and Disease
DownloadFall 2011
Middle-aged and older adult walking and hiking groups of Cochrane had unique perceptions of health and healing due to their activities, the equipment they used, the environments they explored, and the relationships they developed. Past anthropological research has focused on aging, ethnomedicine,...
-
Motor unit recruitment by intraspinal microstimulation and long-term neuromuscular adaptations
DownloadFall 2009
Spinal cord injury is a devastating neurological disorder partially characterized by a loss of motor function below the lesion. The dramatic loss of activity results in muscle atrophy and slow-to-fast transformation of contractile elements, producing smaller, weaker and more fatiguable muscles....
-
Fall 2015
Inhibitory feedback from sensory pathways is important for controlling movement. In this thesis we characterize a long-latency inhibitory spinal pathway to ankle flexors that is activated by low-threshold, homonymous afferents. In non-injured participants, this pathway was activated by both...
-
Spring 2010
Neural prostheses (NPs) are electronic stimulators that activate nerves to restore sensory or motor functions. Surface NPs are non-invasive and inexpensive, but are often poorly selective, activating non-targeted muscles and cutaneous sensory nerves that can cause pain or discomfort. Implanted...
-
Fall 2013
In this thesis the participation of tactile feedback from the hands in the control of balance was investigated. In Chapter 2, I characterized arm and leg reactions to unexpected perturbations delivered through the arms during walking. Perturbations applied at the hands resulted in early latency...