20 results on '"Maslovat, Dana"'
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2. Response triggering by an acoustic stimulus increases with stimulus intensity and is best predicted by startle reflex activation
3. An unperceived acoustic stimulus decreases reaction time to visual information in a patient with cortical deafness
4. A TMS-induced cortical silent period delays the contralateral limb for bimanual symmetrical movements and the reaction time delay is reduced on startle trials
5. Startle Reduces the TMS-Induced Reaction Time Delay in a Single Limb of a Bimanual Movement
6. Bimanual but not unimanual finger movements are triggered by a startling acoustic stimulus: evidence for increased reticulospinal drive for bimanual responses
7. StartReact effects are dependent on engagement of startle reflex circuits: support for a subcortically mediated initiation pathway
8. Influence of kinesthetic motor imagery and effector specificity on the long-latency stretch response
9. High-intensity transcranial magnetic stimulation reveals differential cortical contributions to prepared responses
10. Visual processing is diminished during movement execution
11. Response preparation and execution during intentional bimanual pattern switching
12. Perturbation Predictability Can Influence the Long-Latency Stretch Response
13. Voluntary reaction time and long-latency reflex modulation
14. Responses to startling acoustic stimuli indicate that movement-related activation does not build up in anticipation of action
15. Anodal transcranial direct current stimulation applied over the supplementary motor area delays spontaneous antiphase-to-in-phase transitions
16. Responses to startling acoustic stimuli indicate that movement-related activation is constant prior to action: a replication with an alternate interpretation
17. The Time Course of Corticospinal Excitability during a Simple Reaction Time Task
18. Startle reveals independent preparation and initiation of triphasic EMG burst components in targeted ballistic movements
19. Motor preparation of spatially and temporally defined movements: evidence from startle
20. Feed‐forward control of phonetic gestures in consonant–vowel syllables: Evidence from responses to auditory startle.
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