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Philippe Archambault

Researcher at Laval University

Publications -  332
Citations -  8495

Philippe Archambault is an academic researcher from Laval University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Benthic zone & Arctic. The author has an hindex of 44, co-authored 298 publications receiving 6837 citations. Previous affiliations of Philippe Archambault include Université du Québec & Jewish Rehabilitation Hospital.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of robot-assisted therapy on stroke rehabilitation in upper limbs: systematic review and meta-analysis of the literature.

TL;DR: It is found that when the duration/intensity of conventional therapy (CT) is matched with that of the robot-assisted therapy (RT), no difference exists between the intensive CT and RT groups in terms of motor recovery, activities of daily living, strength, and motor control.
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Scales of coastal heterogeneity and benthic intertidal species richness, diversity and abundance

TL;DR: The present study showed that the scales which influenced abundance were smaller than 20 cm in the intertidal zone and indicated that 2 distinct spatial scales explained the vanab~lity within the same marine intert tidal community, i e vanability in species nchness and in abundance.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Evaluation of the JACO robotic arm: Clinico-economic study for powered wheelchair users with upper-extremity disabilities

TL;DR: Results show that JACO is easy to use as the majority of the participants were able to accomplish the testing tasks on their first attempt and the economic model results inferred that the use of theJACO arm system could potentially reduce caregiving time by 41%.
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Climate forcing multiplies biological productivity in the coastal Arctic Ocean

TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of changing ice and atmospheric conditions on the upwelling of deep nutrient-laden waters and biological productivity in the coastal Beaufort Sea were quantified using a unique combination of in situ and remote-sensing approaches.
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Recruitment and sequencing of different degrees of freedom during pointing movements involving the trunk in healthy and hemiparetic subjects.

TL;DR: It is concluded that recruitment and sequencing of different degrees of freedom may be impaired in this population of patients, including an increase in movement segmentation and duration and the lack of stereotypic movement sequencing may imply that these subjects had deficits in learning associated with short-term memory.