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Breanna Erin Studenka

Researcher at Utah State University

Publications -  37
Citations -  666

Breanna Erin Studenka is an academic researcher from Utah State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Autism spectrum disorder & GRASP. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 35 publications receiving 610 citations. Previous affiliations of Breanna Erin Studenka include Bielefeld University & Pennsylvania State University.

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Distinct timing mechanisms produce discrete and continuous movements

TL;DR: This work presents an unambiguous non-empirical classification based on theorems in dynamical system theory that sets discrete and continuous movements apart, and demonstrates that discrete movements require a time keeper while fast rhythmic movements do not.
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Noise and complexity in human postural control: Interpreting the different estimations of entropy

TL;DR: Examination of noise, sampling frequency and time series length influence various measures of entropy when applied to human center of pressure (CoP) data, as well as in synthetic signals with known properties, suggests long-range correlations should be removed from CoP data prior to calculating entropy.
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Narrative Intervention for Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD).

TL;DR: The results demonstrate the efficacy of the 3-phase narrative instruction program for improving the fictional narration abilities of children with ASD.
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Extending end-state comfort effect: do we consider the beginning state comfort of another?

TL;DR: The results demonstrated that participants allowed the confederate to adopt a comfortable beginning state comfort on 100% of the trials for all the tools and the participants did not sacrifice end-state comfort, demonstrating that the participants were able to plan ahead to both maximize their own end- state comfort and the beginning statecomfort of the confederationate.
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The influence of dominant versus non-dominant hand on event and emergent motor timing.

TL;DR: It is suggested that the use of emergent timing might depend upon the extensive practice experienced by a person's dominant hand, while event timing is shareable across hands whileEmergent timing is specific to an effector.