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Physiology of Meditation Techniques   |   Physiology of Pranayama   |   Yoga For Rehabilitation   |   Yoga in Perception and Performance   |   Therapeutic Applications of Yoga

 
Improvement in Visual Perception Following Yoga Training
 
Improvement in Visual Perceptual Sensitivity in Children Following Yoga Training
 
A Combination of Focusing And Defocusing Through Yoga Reduces Optical Illusion More Than Focusing Alone
 
Progressive Increase in Critical Flicker Fusion Frequency Following Yoga Training
 
Physiological Changes in Sports Teachers Following 3 Months of Training n Yoga
 
Improvement in Static Motor Performance Following Yogic Training of School Children
 
Pranayama Increases Grip Strength Without Lateralized Effects
 
Plasticity of Motor Control Systems Demonstrated by Yoga Training
 
Factors Influencing Changes in Tweezer Dexterity Scores Following Yoga Training
 
Yoga Training And Motor Speed Based on A Finger Tapping Task
 
Effect of Yoga Training on Maze Learning
 
Improved Performance in The Tower of London Test Following Yoga
 
Yoga Breathing Through a Particular Nostril Increases Spatial Memory Scores Without Lateralized Effects1


REFERENCES

1. A Resolution of Directorate of Education. Yoga training for teachers in service, under the central sponsored program of introducing yoga in school and college curriculum. Bangalore, Directorate of Education, Government of Karnataka, 1994.

2. Telles S, Naveen KV: Yoga for rehabilitation: An overview. Indian J Med Sciences 1997; 51 (4): 123- 127.

3. Karen S, Blasdell MS: The effects of transcendental meditation technique upon a complex perceptual- motor task. In David WJ, John TF, eds. Scientific research on the transcendental meditation program. West Germany, Maharshi European Research University Press 1977: 322-325.

4. Telles S, Hanumanthaiah BH, Nagarathna R, Nagendra HR: Improvement in static motor performance following yoga training of school children. Percept Mot Skills 1993; 76: 1264-1266.

5. Telles S, Hanumanthaiah BH, Nagarathna R, Nagendra HR: Plasticity of motor control systems demonstrated by yoga training. Indian J Physiol Pharmacol 1994; 38 (2): 143-144.

6. Kilshaw D, Annett M: Right and left hand skill: Effects of age, sex and hand preference showing superior skill in left handers. Br J Psychol 1983; 74:253-268.

7. Peters M, Campagnaro P. Do women really excel over men in manual dexterity? J Exp Psychol: Human Percept Perform 1996; 22 (5): 1107-1112.

8. Super DE, Crites JO: Appraising vocational fitness: by means of psychological tests. New York, Harper & Row, 1962.

9. Napier JR: The prehensile movements of the human hand. J Bone Joint Surg 1956; 388: 902- 913.

10. Bortoff GA, Strick PL: Corticospinal terminations in two new world primates: further evidence that corticomotoneuronal connections provide part of the neural substrate for manual dexterity. J Neurosei 1996; 13 (12): 5105-5118.

11. Ghosh PK, Ghorpade MB: Industrial and organizational psychology. Bombay, Himalaya Publishing House, 1991.

12. Stocker JM: Motor performance and state anxiety at selected stages of the menstrual cycle. Diss Abs Intern 1973; 34: 3971A-3972A.

13. Crisan HG: Pranayama in anxiety neurosis-A pilot study. M.D. thesis submitted to University of Heidelberg, West Germany, 1984.


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