Women Researcher Award

Alisa Kokorina

Alisa Kokorina, affiliated with the Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology, is a researcher recognized for contributions to biology, neurotechnology, and post-COVID-19 clinical outcome research. Her scholarly activities reflect interdisciplinary collaboration involving rehabilitation technologies, neuroscience, and international healthcare consensus studies.[1]

Alisa Kokorina
Affiliation Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology
Country Russia
Scopus ID 57438603500
Documents 2
Citations 288
h-index 2
Subject Area Biology
Event Scientific World Research Awards
ORCID 0000-0001-5325-5830

Her publications address rehabilitation science, clinical outcome standardization, and brain-computer interface methodologies. Through participation in international Delphi consensus initiatives, Kokorina has contributed to the development of standardized approaches for studying post-COVID-19 conditions and rehabilitation outcomes.[2]

Abstract

Alisa Kokorina is associated with interdisciplinary scientific research focusing on biology, neurotechnology, and clinical rehabilitation studies. Her scholarly work includes participation in international investigations related to post-COVID-19 condition assessment and the development of standardized clinical outcome sets. She has contributed to research on brain-computer interface technologies and lower limb rehabilitation systems integrating electrical spinal stimulation methodologies. Publications connected to her research profile appear in internationally recognized journals such as The Lancet Respiratory Medicine, BMC Medicine, and Frontiers in Human Neuroscience. These contributions demonstrate collaborative engagement in evidence-based healthcare and rehabilitation science research initiatives.[2]

Keywords

Biology, Neurotechnology, Brain-Computer Interface, Rehabilitation Science, Post-COVID-19 Research, Clinical Outcomes, Neuroscience, Delphi Consensus.

Introduction

The increasing integration of neurotechnology and healthcare analytics has expanded interdisciplinary biomedical research. Alisa Kokorina has participated in collaborative studies involving rehabilitation systems, neuroscience, and post-COVID-19 clinical frameworks. Her research activity reflects the importance of international scientific cooperation in addressing rehabilitation and long-term healthcare challenges.[3]

Research Profile

Kokorina’s academic profile includes publications indexed through ORCID and Scopus databases. Her documented research areas involve neurorehabilitation systems, post-stroke rehabilitation, and consensus-based clinical outcome measurement studies. She is affiliated with international collaborative research involving medical and rehabilitation sciences.[1]

Research Contributions

Among her noted contributions is participation in studies examining core outcome measurement instruments for adults with post-COVID-19 conditions. Additional work explored rehabilitation methods using visuomotor transformation-based brain-computer interfaces and spinal cord electrical stimulation technologies.[4]

Publications

  • Case Report: post-stroke rehabilitation with a visuomotor transformation-based brain-computer interface, Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, 2026.
  • A core outcome set for post-COVID-19 condition in adults for use in clinical practice and research, Lancet Respiratory Medicine, 2022.
  • Novel method for lower limb rehabilitation based on brain-computer interface and transcutaneous spinal cord electrical stimulation, CNN Conference Proceedings, 2022.

Research Impact

The citation record associated with Kokorina’s research profile indicates scholarly visibility within rehabilitation and biomedical research communities. Her collaborative publications support the advancement of standardized methodologies and interdisciplinary rehabilitation research approaches.[5]

Award Suitability

The Women Researcher Award recognizes emerging and established researchers contributing to scientific innovation and collaborative advancement. Kokorina’s involvement in neurotechnology, rehabilitation science, and post-COVID-19 outcome studies demonstrates interdisciplinary engagement aligned with the objectives of international scientific recognition programs.

Conclusion

Alisa Kokorina’s academic profile reflects contributions to biomedical and rehabilitation sciences through collaborative international research. Her participation in consensus studies and neurotechnology-based rehabilitation investigations highlights ongoing engagement with contemporary healthcare and biological research challenges.

References

  1. Elsevier. (n.d.). Scopus author details: Alisa Kokorina, Author ID 57438603500. Scopus.
    https://www.scopus.com/authid/detail.uri?authorId=57438603500
  2. ORCID. (2026). Alisa Kokorina ORCID Record.
    https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5325-5830
  3. Munblit, D. et al. (2022). A core outcome set for post-COVID-19 condition in adults. Lancet Respiratory Medicine.
    https://doi.org/10.1016/S2213-2600(22)00169-2
  4. Ninenko, I. et al. (2022). Novel method for lower limb rehabilitation based on brain-computer interface.
    https://doi.org/10.1109/cnn56452.2022.9912550
  5. Kokorina, A. et al. (2026). Case Report: post-stroke rehabilitation with a visuomotor transformation-based brain-computer interface.
    https://doi.org/10.3389/fnhum.2026.1774409
Alisa Kokorina | Biology | Women Researcher Award

You May Also Like