Zobrazeno 1 - 8
of 8
pro vyhledávání: '"Peter Burchill"'
Autor:
Paul Brennan, Stephen J. Price, Babar Vaqas, Sara Erridge, Silvia Marino, Sarah Jefferies, Kathreena M Kurian, Wendy Qian, Peter Burchill, Alasdair G Rooney, Michael D. Jenkinson, Colin Watts, Debbie Keatley, Catherine McBain, Robin Grant, Adam D. Waldman, Martin G. McCabe, Helen Bulbeck, Samantha J Mills, Erica Moyes
Publikováno v:
Neuro-oncology practice
Kurian, K, Jenkinson, M D, Brennan, P, Grant, R, Jefferies, S, Rooney, A G, Bulbeck, H, Erridge, S C, Mills, S, McBain, C, McCabe, M G, Price, S J, Marino, S, Moyes, E, Qian, W, Waldman, A, Vaqas, B, Keatley, D, Burchill, P & Watts, C 2017, ' Brain tumor research in the United Kingdom: current perspective and future challenges : A strategy document from the NCRI brain tumor CSG ', Neuro-Oncology Practice . https://doi.org/10.1093/nop/npx022
Kurian, K M, Jenkinson, M D, Brennan, P M, Grant, R, Jefferies, S, Rooney, A G, Bulbeck, H, Erridge, S C, Mills, S, Mcbain, C, Mccabe, M G, Price, S J, Marino, S, Moyes, E, Qian, W, Waldman, A, Vaqas, B, Keatley, D, Burchill, P & Watts, C 2017, ' Brain tumor research in the United Kingdom: current perspective and future challenges: A strategy document from the NCRI Brain Tumor CSG ', Neuro-Oncology Practice . https://doi.org/10.1093/nop/npx022
Kurian, K, Jenkinson, M D, Brennan, P, Grant, R, Jefferies, S, Rooney, A G, Bulbeck, H, Erridge, S C, Mills, S, McBain, C, McCabe, M G, Price, S J, Marino, S, Moyes, E, Qian, W, Waldman, A, Vaqas, B, Keatley, D, Burchill, P & Watts, C 2017, ' Brain tumor research in the United Kingdom: current perspective and future challenges : A strategy document from the NCRI brain tumor CSG ', Neuro-Oncology Practice . https://doi.org/10.1093/nop/npx022
Kurian, K M, Jenkinson, M D, Brennan, P M, Grant, R, Jefferies, S, Rooney, A G, Bulbeck, H, Erridge, S C, Mills, S, Mcbain, C, Mccabe, M G, Price, S J, Marino, S, Moyes, E, Qian, W, Waldman, A, Vaqas, B, Keatley, D, Burchill, P & Watts, C 2017, ' Brain tumor research in the United Kingdom: current perspective and future challenges: A strategy document from the NCRI Brain Tumor CSG ', Neuro-Oncology Practice . https://doi.org/10.1093/nop/npx022
The National Cancer Research Institute (NCRI) is a partnership of charity and government research funders whose purpose is to improve health and quality of life by accelerating progress in cancer-related research through collaboration. Under this umb
Publikováno v:
Perception & Psychophysics. 63:47-58
Unidirectional motion of a uniplanar background induces a codirectional postural sway. It has been shown recently that fixation of a stationary foreground object induces a sway response in the opposite direction (Bronstein & Buckwell, 1997) when the
Publikováno v:
Experimental Brain Research. 131:244-252
Visual control of postural sway during quiet standing was investigated in normal subjects to see if motion parallax cues were able to improve postural stability. In experiment 1, six normal subjects fixated a fluorescent foreground target, either alo
Publikováno v:
Clinical Autonomic Research. 10:23-28
This study explored the cardiovascular responses to illusions of self-motion (vection) induced in normal subjects according to the hypothesis that vection may be a model for vertigo in vestibular disease. Responses were obtained from 10 men who were
Publikováno v:
Equilibrium Research. 57:54-59
Autor:
David Copp, Timothy J. Mortimer, Brad Hieb, Chris Belton, Judy Che, Nick Darnton, Peter Bennett, Kenneth Roy Butts, Peter Burchill, Mark John Jennings
Publikováno v:
SAE Technical Paper Series.
Publikováno v:
Experimental brain research. 125(4)
Although activation of otolith receptors is known to elicit cardiovascular responses in animals, it is unclear whether vestibular stimulation can evoke changes in blood pressure and heart rate (which are independent of motion sickness) in humans. In
Publikováno v:
Acta oto-laryngologica. 118(5)
We describe an attempt to model unilateral vestibular dysfunction in normal man by inducing vestibular asymmetry with exposure to long-term, unidirectional, visual-vestibular conflict. Subjects were exposed to pseudo-random (0.13, 0.2, 0.25, 0.3Hz; 7