Tokyo: Springer, 2011. — 155 p.
Rapidly growing knowledge in systems neuroscience may contribute to expand the range of activities in persons with disabilities, but in its practical application, cooperation between experts in different research fields is necessary. In this conference, the guest speakers and audiences will be from wide range of research fields; e.g., systems-neuroscience, neurology, engineering, psychology, and the attendees will discuss the possibilities.
Brain–Computer Interfaces in the Rehabilitation of Stroke and Neurotrauma
Brain–Machine Interfaces for Persons with Disabilities
Brain–Machine Interfaces Based on Computational Model
Improvement of Spastic Stroke Hemiparesis Using rTMS Combined with Motor Training
Molecular and Electrophysiological Approaches for Functional Recovery in Patients with Injured Spinal Cord
Prism Adaptation and the Rehabilitation of Spatial Neglect
Toward a Cure Based on a Better Understanding of Autism Spectrum Disorder
Exceeding the Limits: Behavioral Enhancement Via External Influence
Neural Correlates of Reasoning by Exclusion