DocumentCode
20533
Title
Angular Momentum During Unexpected Multidirectional Perturbations Delivered While Walking
Author
Martelli, D. ; Monaco, V. ; Luciani, L.B. ; Micera, Silvestro
Author_Institution
Scuola Superiore Sant´Anna, BioRobotics Inst., Pontedera, Italy
Volume
60
Issue
7
fYear
2013
fDate
Jul-13
Firstpage
1785
Lastpage
1795
Abstract
This study investigated the hypothesis that the coupled contribution of all body segments to the whole-body response during both walking and managing unexpected perturbations is characterized by similar features which do not depend on the laterality (i.e., right versus left sides), but can be influenced by the direction (e.g., north, east, south, etc.) of the perturbation. The whole-body angular momentum was estimated as summation of segmental angular momenta, while 15 young adults managed ten unexpected unilateral perturbations during walking. Then, the Principal component analysis was used to extract primitive features describing intersegment coordination. Results showed that intersegment coupling was similar even though the reactive response to the perturbations elicited more consistent motor schemes across body segments than during walking, especially in the frontal plane. The direction of the perturbation significantly (p <; 0.05) affected angular momentum regulation documenting the attitude of the central nervous system to interpret multiple sensory inputs in order to produce context-dependent reactive responses. With respect to the side, results highlighted anisotropic features of the elicited motor schemes that seemed to depend on subjects´ dominance. Finally, results confirm that the coordination of upper and lower body segments is synergistically achieved strengthening the hypothesis that it may result from common neural pathways.
Keywords
angular momentum; feature extraction; gait analysis; medical signal processing; neurophysiology; perturbation theory; principal component analysis; angular momentum regulation documentation; body segments; central nervous system; common neural pathways; context-dependent reactive responses; intersegment coordination; intersegment coupling; motor schemes; multiple sensory inputs; primitive feature extraction; principal component analysis; segmental angular momenta; unexpected multidirectional perturbations; walking; whole-body angular momentum; whole-body response; young adults; Analysis of variance; Belts; Foot; Kinematics; Legged locomotion; Principal component analysis; Thermal stability; Angular momentum; balance control; interlimb coordination; perturbation; walking; Acceleration; Adaptation, Physiological; Adult; Computer Simulation; Energy Transfer; Female; Gait; Humans; Joints; Male; Models, Biological; Rotation; Walking; Whole Body Imaging;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9294
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TBME.2013.2241434
Filename
6416030
Link To Document