Brain Stimulation and behavioural cognitive rehabilitation: a new tool for neurorehabilitation? A foreword
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2011
Abstract:
This special issue of Neuropsychological Rehabilitation aims to present new
knowledge about a recent and innovative approach that can possibly ameliorate
the outcome of the rehabilitation of cognitive deficits, namely: non-invasive
brain stimulation (NIBS). The issue includes a series of papers on NIBS and
combined rehabilitation studies (reviews and some original contributions),
highlighting the challenges, as well as the power, of this novel approach.
The old and time-honoured concept that the brain structure becomes
immutable after childhood has been abandoned, based on the evidence that
all areas of the brain remain plastic in adulthood and during physiological
ageing, with even some evidence for neurogenesis (Berlucchi, this issue).
knowledge about a recent and innovative approach that can possibly ameliorate
the outcome of the rehabilitation of cognitive deficits, namely: non-invasive
brain stimulation (NIBS). The issue includes a series of papers on NIBS and
combined rehabilitation studies (reviews and some original contributions),
highlighting the challenges, as well as the power, of this novel approach.
The old and time-honoured concept that the brain structure becomes
immutable after childhood has been abandoned, based on the evidence that
all areas of the brain remain plastic in adulthood and during physiological
ageing, with even some evidence for neurogenesis (Berlucchi, this issue).
CRIS type:
1.1 Articolo in rivista
List of contributors:
Miniussi, Carlo; G., Vallar
Published in: