Bruce Etnyre
Rice University
27 Papers
176 Citations
Bruce Etnyre is an academic researcher from Rice University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Isometric exercise & H-reflex. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 27 publications. Previous affiliations of Bruce Etnyre include Texas Woman's University.
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Papers
Effects of visual and auditory cues on gait in individuals with Parkinson's disease.
TL;DR: Visual and auditory cues improved gait performance in patients with PD, but they did so in different ways and the simultaneous use of auditory and visual cues did not improve gait significantly more than each cue alone.
360
H-reflex changes during static stretching and two variations of proprioceptive neuromuscular facilitation techniques
Bruce Etnyre,Lawrence D. Abraham +1 more
TL;DR: It was concluded that several inhibitory neural influences can have an additive effect in profoundly reducing motor pool excitability and it is suggested that the proprioceptive neuromuscular facilitation (PNF) methods provide the greatest potential for muscle lengthening.
128
Fatigue effects on knee joint stability during two jump tasks in women.
Alexis Ortiz,Sharon L. Olson,Bruce Etnyre,Elaine E Trudelle-Jackson,William P. Bartlett,Heidi L. Venegas-Rios +5 more
TL;DR: Training strength-endurance components and the ability to maintain control of body movements in either rested or fatigued situations might help reduce injuries in young women athletes.
70
Accuracy characteristics of throwing as a result of maximum force effort
TL;DR: The greater average error for the maximal force for all subjects suggested the speed-accuracy tradeoff applied to this aiming task, and the greater variability in accuracy with maximal force suggested a ceiling effect, which reduced variability in previous studies, was not achieved.
68
The Influence of Pain Distribution on Walking Velocity and Horizontal Ground Reaction Forces in Patients with Low Back Pain
TL;DR: Evaluating the influence of pain distribution on gait characteristics in subjects with low back problems during walking at preferred and fastest speeds found those with referred leg pain tend to utilize significantly altered gait strategies that are more apparent at faster walking speeds.