J
John W. Krakauer
Researcher at Johns Hopkins University
Publications - 190
Citations - 25005
John W. Krakauer is an academic researcher from Johns Hopkins University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Motor learning & Stroke. The author has an hindex of 66, co-authored 169 publications receiving 21008 citations. Previous affiliations of John W. Krakauer include Columbia University Medical Center & Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Error Correction, Sensory Prediction, and Adaptation in Motor Control
TL;DR: Evidence shows that forward models remain calibrated through motor adaptation: learning driven by sensory prediction errors, and is used to produce a lifetime of calibrated movements.
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Noninvasive cortical stimulation enhances motor skill acquisition over multiple days through an effect on consolidation
Janine Reis,Heidi M. Schambra,Leonardo G. Cohen,Ethan R. Buch,Brita Fritsch,Brita Fritsch,Eric Zarahn,Pablo Celnik,John W. Krakauer +8 more
TL;DR: Findings support the existence of a consolidation mechanism, susceptible to anodal tDCS, which contributes to offline effects but not to online effects or long-term retention, and may hold promise for the rehabilitation of brain injury.
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Motor learning: its relevance to stroke recovery and neurorehabilitation.
TL;DR: This review will focus on arm movements and address the following questions: What is motor learning, do patients with hemiparesis have a learning deficit, and are approaches based on motor learning principles useful for rehabilitation?
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A computational neuroanatomy for motor control
Reza Shadmehr,John W. Krakauer +1 more
TL;DR: It is argued that the lesion approach and theoretical motor control can mutually inform each other and one may identify distinct motor control processes from computational models and map them onto specific deficits in patients.
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Neuroscience Needs Behavior: Correcting a Reductionist Bias
John W. Krakauer,Asif A. Ghazanfar,Alex Gomez-Marin,Malcolm A. MacIver,David Poeppel,David Poeppel +5 more
TL;DR: A more pluralistic notion of neuroscience is advocated when it comes to the brain-behavior relationship: behavioral work provides understanding, whereas neural interventions test causality.