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Benoît G. Bardy

Researcher at University of Montpellier

Publications -  169
Citations -  5552

Benoît G. Bardy is an academic researcher from University of Montpellier. The author has contributed to research in topics: Motor coordination & Body movement. The author has an hindex of 38, co-authored 160 publications receiving 4967 citations. Previous affiliations of Benoît G. Bardy include Aix-Marseille University & Université Paris-Saclay.

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Dynamics of human postural transitions.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined transitions between postural coordination modes involved in human stance and found that changes in body coordination follow typical nonequilibrium phase transitions, exhibiting multistability, bifurcation, critical fluctuations, hysteresis, and critical slowing down.
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Effect of swimming velocity on arm coordination in the front crawl: a dynamic analysis

TL;DR: By adjusting the control and order parameters within the context of a specific race distance, both coach and swimmer will be able to detect the best adapted pattern for a given race pace and follow how arm coordination changes over the course of training.

On the nature and evaluation of fidelity in virtual environments

TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that simulation is essentially impossible: sensory stimulation in a simulator cannot be identical to sensory stimulation that is available in the system being simulated, and suggest that these differences in stimulation provide information to the user about the nature of the simulation, as such.
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The role of central and peripheral vision in postural control duringwalking

TL;DR: Postural responses to optic flow patterns presented at different retinal eccentricities during walking demonstrated functionally specific postural responses in both central and peripheral vision, contrary to the peripheral dominance and differential sensitivity hypotheses, but consistent with retinal invariance.
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Motion parallax is used to control postural sway during walking.

TL;DR: Three experiments tested the hypothesis that postural sway during locomotion is visually regulated by motion parallax as well as optical expansion by presenting oscillating displays of three-dimensional scenes to participants walking on a treadmill, while postural swayed was recorded.