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Dario Cazzoli

Researcher at University of Bern

Publications -  82
Citations -  1668

Dario Cazzoli is an academic researcher from University of Bern. The author has contributed to research in topics: Neglect & CTBS. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 69 publications receiving 1332 citations. Previous affiliations of Dario Cazzoli include John Radcliffe Hospital & University of Oxford.

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One Session of Repeated Parietal Theta Burst Stimulation Trains Induces Long-Lasting Improvement of Visual Neglect

TL;DR: The new approach of repeating TBS at the same day may be promising for therapy of neglect, and the application of 4 TBS trains significantly increased the number of perceived left targets up to 32 hours.
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Theta burst stimulation reduces disability during the activities of daily living in spatial neglect

TL;DR: Investigation of whether the repeated application of continuous theta burst stimulation trains could ameliorate spatial neglect on a quantitative measure of the activities of daily living during spontaneous behaviour found it to be a viable add-on therapy in neglect rehabilitation that facilitates recovery of normal everyday behaviour.
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Neglect-like visual exploration behaviour after theta burst transcranial magnetic stimulation of the right posterior parietal cortex.

TL;DR: Results suggest that theta burst rTMS is a reliable method of inducing transient neglect‐like visual exploration behaviour, and this area may lead to neglect of the left hemispace.
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Evaluation of Three State-of-the-Art Classifiers for Recognition of Activities of Daily Living from Smart Home Ambient Data

TL;DR: An activity recognition system based on PIR sensors in conjunction with a clustering classification approach was able to detect ADL from datasets collected from different homes, which could improve care and provide valuable information to better understand the functioning of the authors' societies, as well as to inform both individual and collective action in a smart city scenario.
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Street crossing behavior in younger and older pedestrians: an eye- and head-tracking study

TL;DR: The less secure behavior in street crossing found in older pedestrians could be explained by their reduced cognitive and visual abilities, which resulted in difficulties in the decision-making process, especially under time pressure.