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Alakananda Banerjee

Researcher at Max Super Speciality Hospital

Publications -  15
Citations -  129

Alakananda Banerjee is an academic researcher from Max Super Speciality Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Balance (ability) & Functional electrical stimulation. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 15 publications receiving 120 citations.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Point-of-care-testing of standing posture with Wii balance board and Microsoft Kinect during transcranial direct current stimulation: a feasibility study.

TL;DR: It was concluded that the CoM-CoP lean-line could be used for posture feedback and monitoring during tDCS therapy in conjunction with balance training exercises.
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Feasibility of Functional Electrical Stimulation-Assisted Neurorehabilitation following Stroke in India: A Case Series.

TL;DR: It was found that short-duration, moderately intensive FES-assisted gait therapy improved volitional gait in 3 out of 7 stroke survivors suffering from foot drop and tailoring the intensity and/or frequency based on patient's ability may make it viable as a therapeutic intervention.
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A Low-Cost Point-of-Care Testing System for Psychomotor Symptoms of Depression Affecting Standing Balance: A Preliminary Study in India.

TL;DR: Monitoring quantitative electroencephalography along with the center of pressure for cued response time during functional reach tasks may provide insights into the psychomotor symptoms of depression where average slope of the Theta-Alpha power ratio versus average slopes of baseline-normalized response time may be a candidate biomarker, which remains to be evaluated in future clinical studies.
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Nonlinear analysis of electromyogram following gait training with myoelectrically triggered neuromuscular electrical stimulation in stroke survivors

TL;DR: The study showed an improvement in paretic muscle function during a fatiguing task following gait training with EMG-triggered NMES, and showed that RQA parameters—%Rec and %Det—were sensitive to changes inParetic/non-paretic Muscle properties due to gaitTraining and can be used for non-invasive muscle monitoring in stroke survivors undergoing rehabilitation.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Low-cost visual postural feedback with Wii balance board and Microsoft Kinect - a feasibility study

TL;DR: In this paper, a posture training paradigm with visual biofeedback is presented for physical rehabilitation following posture disorders (e.g. pusher syndrome) using Wii balance board, and conceptual design of visual postural-feedback paradigm so that the user can improve functional reach tasks.