102,952 research outputs found

    Diritto al tempo futuro. Educazione, eco-resilienza e circolarità

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    A trent’anni dalla Convenzione ONU sui Diritti dell’Infanzia (United Nations, 1989), gli scienziati calcolano in circa 10 anni l’irreversibilità degli impatti dei cambiamenti climatici sull’ecosistema (Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, 2018). Degrado naturale, riscaldamento del pianeta e povertà ambientali rappresentano emblematiche esperienze diseducative contemporanee, in grado di contrarre o di spezzare la capacità di futuro delle nuove generazioni. Siamo in presenza di una sola agenda per lo sviluppo sostenibile, in un’unica decade generazionale e in un unico spazio vitale pla- netario: è inderogabile l’impegno sollecito della progettazione pedagogica per affermare il diritto dell’infanzia al tempo futuro. Esso è premessa per l’esercizio di ogni ulteriore libertà, muovendo i giovani in un associativo global strike for future. Nell’impronta viva della pedagogia dello sviluppo umano (Pati, 2016), serve partecipare l’educazione per portare a valore le potenzialità creative e i talenti trasformativi delle nuove generazioni perché la sostenibilità si faccia eco-resiliente e circolare. Alta Scuola per l’Ambiente, nell’ambito di una delle sue iniziative di terza missione, ha provato a deci- frare l’Agenda ONU 2030 (United Nations, 2015) a partire dallo sguardo dei giovani e dei bambini. Un cammino di dialogo tra generazioni, un pro- getto di futuro condiviso

    L’emblema della mobilità. Per una pedagogia della dignità umana

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    Un settore strategico nel concepire il vivere sostenibile è quello dei trasporti. La mobilità si configura come luogo strategico di politiche ambientali e di investimento socioeconomico, di orientamento e formazione per integrare in modo fruttuoso infrastrutture tecnologiche, naturalistiche e sociali

    Effects of Neuromodulation on Gait

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    In the last decades, non-invasive brain stimulation (NIBS) has evolved to become a valuable tool in both basic and clinical neuroscience. Various methods of transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) and transcranial electrical stimulation (TES) have been widely used for diagnostic, prognostic and even therapeutic applications in a broad range of neurological and psychiatric disorders. The rationale for using NIBS techniques lies in the possibility to modulate, in a targeted manner, the activity of different cerebral and cerebellar cortical regions, as well as the functional connections between these areas and distant brain regions also including subcortical structures. The neural circuitry involved in the different aspects of gait control is very complex and includes, along with the basal ganglia-cortical loops, the cerebellum and structures of the brainstem and the spinal cord. This is why different approaches of NIBS have been suggested for treatment of gait disorders in a variety of neurological disorders including Parkinson’s disease, stroke, cerebellar ataxia, multiple sclerosis, cerebral palsy and spinal cord injury. This review will collate the available knowledge on the physiology of gait and balance control, focusing on the ways in which the use of NIBS may contribute to the understanding and treatment of gait disorders

    Il paziente cefalalgico: gestione ed aspetti socio-economici.

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    I costi economici per il SSN per la gestione ambulatoriale ed in regime di ricovero di pazienti con emicrania, ed aspetti critici del sistema a DR

    The Italian Consensus Conference on Pain in Neurorehabilitation

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    Pain is frequent in several neurological conditions, such as stroke, Parkinson’s disease, multiple sclerosis, diabetic neuropathy, but it is often underestimated and therefore untreated or not successfully treated. Pain reduces quality of life, it may be the cause of adaptive disorders (such as anxiety and depression) and, in patients undergoing rehabilitation, it may negatively impact rehabilitation procedures and hamper the outcome. Unfortunately, there are no significant data regarding the impact of pain in neurorehabilitation patients and what would be the impact of an appropriate pain treatment on rehabilitation outcome. Accordingly, there are no guidelines providing indications on how to treat pain in patients with pain during rehabilitation treatment and thereafter. Given this background, and to comply with the Italian law 38 released on 2010 by the Italian Ministry of Health to guarantee adequate care and treatment of patients with pain both in hospital and in primary care, the Italian Society for Neurological Rehabilitation (SIRN) along with the Italian Society for Physical and Rehabilitative Medicine (SIMFER), promoted a work-in-progress platform, the Italian Consensus Conference on Pain in Neurorehabilitation (ICCPNR)
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