M
Marco Rabuffetti
Researcher at Polytechnic University of Milan
Publications - 160
Citations - 4937
Marco Rabuffetti is an academic researcher from Polytechnic University of Milan. The author has contributed to research in topics: Gait (human) & Gait analysis. The author has an hindex of 33, co-authored 149 publications receiving 4290 citations. Previous affiliations of Marco Rabuffetti include University of Turin.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Spot check of the calibrated force platform location.
TL;DR: It was verified that the hip joint moment may be equally affected by a single marker misplacement during platform location calibration, an occurrence that was clearly identified by the spot check, and by a hip centre location inaccuracy of 30 mm.
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How Tool-Use Shapes Body Metric Representation: Evidence From Motor Training With and Without Robotic Assistance.
Valentina Bruno,Ilaria Carpinella,Marco Rabuffetti,Lorenzo De Giuli,Corrado Sinigaglia,Francesca Garbarini,Maurizio Ferrarin +6 more
TL;DR: The findings suggest that tool-use may shape body metric representation only when action programs are motorically represented and not merely produced, and support the use of robots for the rehabilitation of brain-damaged hemiplegic patients.
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Verbal commands help the execution of endogenous movements in anarchic hand.
TL;DR: Investigating whether the ability to perform sequential movements improves under verbal command as anecdotally observed in patients with AH showed that the performance of AC's right AH was impaired in sequential tasks and that this impairment was improved by verbal command.
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Optimised procedure for the calibration of the force platform location
TL;DR: Results evidenced how the introduction of such optimised procedure could improve the reliability of the calibrated platform location and, consequently, of the kinetic variables considered in posture and gait analysis.
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Tibialis posterior tendon transfer through the interosseal membrane in paralysis of the common peroneal nerve
TL;DR: The presence of a continuous activity of the Muscle during walking is a confirmation of the muscle function at least partially as a tenodesis in patients affected with a deficit in the common peroneal nerve.