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Rob Labruyère

Researcher at Boston Children's Hospital

Publications -  42
Citations -  729

Rob Labruyère is an academic researcher from Boston Children's Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Rehabilitation. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 29 publications receiving 465 citations. Previous affiliations of Rob Labruyère include University of Zurich & ETH Zurich.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI

Signal Processing in Functional Near-Infrared Spectroscopy (fNIRS): Methodological Differences Lead to Different Statistical Results.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated how different signal processing approaches (including and excluding approaches that partially correct for the possible signal contamination) affect the results of a typical functional neuroimaging study performed with functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS).
Dissertation

Signal processing in functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) : methodological differences lead to different statistical results

TL;DR: This study investigates how different signal processing approaches (including and excluding approaches that partially correct for the possible signal contamination) affect the results of a typical functional neuroimaging study performed with fNIRS and recommends adopting signal processing methods that correct for physiological confounding effects in cases where multi-distance measurements are not possible.
Journal ArticleDOI

Strength training versus robot-assisted gait training after incomplete spinal cord injury: a randomized pilot study in patients depending on walking assistance

TL;DR: In patients with chronic iSCI dependent on walking assistance, RAGT was not more effective in improving walking-related outcome compared to lower extremity strength training, however, the low sample size limits generalizability and precision of data interpretation.
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Can Lokomat therapy with children and adolescents be improved? An adaptive clinical pilot trial comparing Guidance force, Path control, and FreeD.

TL;DR: Results indicate that especially Path Control seems promising for adolescent patients undergoing neurorehabilitation, as it increases proximal leg muscle activity while facilitating a physiological muscle activation.
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Feasibility and effects of patient-cooperative robot-aided gait training applied in a 4-week pilot trial

TL;DR: Patient-cooperative robot- aided gait training is feasible in clinical practice and overcomes the main points of criticism against robot-aided gact training: It enables patients to train in an active, variable and more natural way.