sneak peak
From the end of December 2025
Get a feel for how the Evidence in Action research library works with the Sample Database — a curated set of recent neurorehabilitation studies across stroke, SCI, Parkinson’s disease, TBI, and more!
Research papers can be… a lot, and nobody has time to decode jargon just to figure out whether a study is even worth reading. That’s why the library filters the flood of new research, organizes it by population and study type (neurophysiology, interventions, assessments, clinical characteristics), color-codes access (open vs. subscriber), and translates each abstract into clear, human language. You’ll quickly see what the study looked at, what it found, and why it matters for neuro rehab — all designed to save you time, energy, and the headache of endless abstract-skimming. Curious what that looks like? Explore the sample library below.
Purpose:
This database is intended as an educational tool for clinicians, therapists, and healthcare professionals. Its goal is to support evidence-based practice by providing brief, original summaries of recently published research and direct links to the source articles.
Copyright and Access:
All article summaries are original content created by the database curator and do not reproduce copyrighted material (such as full-text PDFs or figures) from the publications. These summaries are transformative and educational in nature: they provide concise, plain-language interpretations tailored for neurorehabilitation clinicians and highlight key clinical takeaways rather than restating the authors’ text. Links provided direct users to the publisher’s official site or publicly accessible databases (e.g., PubMed). Some articles may require subscription or institutional access; the database does not host or distribute paywalled content.
Use and Responsibility:
This database is a curation tool to facilitate access to current research. It is not a substitute for reading the full study. Users are encouraged to consult the original publications before making clinical decisions. While summaries are prepared carefully, they are not peer-reviewed interpretations and should be considered a starting point for evidence appraisal to determine interest in study contents.
Legal Note:
By using this database, users acknowledge that all rights to the original articles remain with the publishers and authors. The curator claims no ownership of the linked content.
Explore recommendations for improving research on stroke rehabilitation, gait speed predictions after stroke, goals for young stroke survivors' community reintegration, who benefits from increased stroke rehab dosing, and much more!
See walking predictions after incomplete SCI, a new two way propulsion system for manual wheelchairs, the effectiveness of high intensity gait training after incomplete SCI, and much more!
See new what the literature about sleep deprivation after concussion, lesion size vs. location on functional outcomes, sensory burden after brain injury, and more!
Check out anticipatory postural adjustments during turning for PD, freezing vs. non freezing of gait characteristics during treadmill training, BFR for exercise induced hypoalgesia in MS, motor imagery for managing fatigue in MS, and more!
Check out comparisons between persistent postural perceptual dizziness and vestibular migraine, self perceived sense of direction in vestibular disorders, a new way for differentiating between central and peripheral vestibular involvement, and more!
See how declarative memory tasks crash the motor learning party, evidence supporting martial arts for older adults, trunk retraining for kids with CP, smarter step counting for individuals with ALS, and more!