Dane Aaron Rowley
University of Hull
6 Papers
1 Citations
Dane Aaron Rowley is an academic researcher from University of Hull. The author has contributed to research in topics: Computer science & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 2 publications.
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Papers
Cognitive correlates of pragmatic language comprehension in adult traumatic brain injury: A systematic review and meta-analyses.
TL;DR: The findings indicate that pragmatic comprehension in TBI is associated with an array of domain general cognitive processes, and as such deficits in these cognitive domains may underlie pragmatic comprehension difficulties following TBI.
Counter-intuitive moral judgement following traumatic brain injury.
TL;DR: The results speak against the view that TBI causes a specific utilitarian bias, suggesting instead that moral intuition is broadly disrupted following TBI.
On the feasibility of simple brain-computer interface systems for enabling children with severe physical disabilities to explore independent movement
TL;DR: The feasibility of BCI-enabled power mobility (PM) control for children with severe physical disabilities was explored in this article , where the authors evaluated BCI performance, standard PM skills and tolerability.
Iterative Development of a Software to Facilitate Independent Home Use of BCI Technologies for Children with Quadriplegic Cerebral Palsy
Erica Floreani,Dion Kelly,Dane Aaron Rowley,Brian Irvine,Eli Kinney-Lang,Adam Kirton +5 more
- 01 Jul 2022
TL;DR: This work applied user-centered design principles to establish a home BCI program for children with quadriplegic cerebral palsy and describes the technical development of the software designed to facilitate BCI use at home.
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Think BIG: Brain-Computer Interface Goals for Children with Quadriplegic Cerebral Palsy
Dion Kelly,Dane Aaron Rowley,Erica Floreani,Eli Kinney-Lang,Ion Robu,Adam Kirton +5 more
- 01 Oct 2023
TL;DR: Despite no significant improvement in BCI consistency across nine sessions, the intervention positively impacted participants' perceived performance and satisfaction in goal-oriented activities and future research should focus on enhancing BCI design, comfort, and effectiveness.
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