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IEEE International Conference on Rehabilitation Robotics (ICORR) 2025

JNER’s ICORR25 collection

The focus of this collection is recent, cutting-edge research of significant interest to the rehabilitation robotics community. Inclusion in this collection is conditional on your paper being accepted by JNER and registering to present the work at the IEEE International Conference on Rehabilitation Robotics (ICORR) 2025, hosted in Chicago IL May 12-16, 2025 (https://rehabweek.org). 

All papers in this collection will be automatically eligible for poster presentation at ICORR25, and a select number will be invited to a podium session that will be specially promoted in the program. As part of the collection, JNER will publish a commentary informed by the related session discussions at ICORR, which will analyze the themes and questions that emerged from these papers. 

This collection of articles has not been sponsored and articles will undergo the journal's standard peer-review process overseen by the Editor-in-Chief. 

Please note that this collection is closed to submissions.

  1. Knee osteoarthritis (KOA) is a prevalent chronic disease worldwide, and traditional treatment methods lack personalized adjustment for individual patient differences and cannot meet the needs of personalized t...

    Authors: Sijia Liu, Jiawei Luo and Chengqi He
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2025 22:107
  2. Brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) hold significant potential for post-stroke motor recovery, yet active movement-based BCIs face limitations in generalization due to inter-subject variability. This study invest...

    Authors: Xinyi Zhang, Lanfang Xie, Wanting Liu, Shaoying Liang, Liyao Huang, Mingjun Wang, Lingling Tian, Li Zhang, Zhen Liang, Hai Li and Gan Huang
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2025 22:97
  3. Despite the reported efficacy of overground robotic exoskeleton (ORE) for rehabilitation of mobility post-stroke, its effectiveness in real-world practice is still debated. We analysed prospectively collected ...

    Authors: Pui Kit Tam, Ning Tang, Nur Shafawati Binte Kamsani, Thian Yong Yap, Ita Coffey-Aladdin, Shi Min Goh, Jean Pei Pei Tan, Yook Cing Lui, Rui Ling Lee, Ramaswamy Suresh and Effie Chew
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2025 22:3
  4. People with Parkinson’s Disease (PD) show abnormal gait patterns compromising their independence and quality of life. Among all gait alterations due to PD, reduced step length, increased cadence, and decreased...

    Authors: Thomas Bowman, Andrea Pergolini, Maria Chiara Carrozza, Tiziana Lencioni, Alberto Marzegan, Mario Meloni, Nicola Vitiello, Simona Crea and Davide Cattaneo
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2024 21:110
  5. Despite recent technological advances that have led to sophisticated bionic prostheses, attaining embodied solutions still remains a challenge. Recently, the investigation of prosthetic embodiment has become a...

    Authors: Theophil Spiegeler Castañeda, Mathilde Connan, Patricia Capsi-Morales, Philipp Beckerle, Claudio Castellini and Cristina Piazza
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2024 21:57

    The Correction to this article has been published in Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2024 21:64

  6. Unsupervised robot-assisted rehabilitation is a promising approach to increase the dose of therapy after stroke, which may help promote sensorimotor recovery without requiring significant additional resources ...

    Authors: Giada Devittori, Daria Dinacci, Davide Romiti, Antonella Califfi, Claudio Petrillo, Paolo Rossi, Raffaele Ranzani, Roger Gassert and Olivier Lambercy
    Citation: Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation 2024 21:52