We describe the muscle synergies accompanying steering of walking along curved trajectories, in order to analyze the simultaneous control of progression and balance-threatening emerging forces. For this purpose, we bilaterally recorded in ten subjects the electromyograms (EMGs) of a representative sample of leg and trunk muscles (n=16) during continuous walking along one straight and two curved trajectories at natural speed. Curvilinear locomotion involved a graded, limbdependent modulation of amplitude and timing of activity of the muscles of the legs and trunk. The turnrelated modulation of the motor pattern was highly coordinated amongst muscles and body sides. For all muscles, linear relationships were detected between the spatial and temporal features of muscle EMG activity. The largest modulation of EMG was observed in gastrocnemius medialis and lateralis muscles, which showed opposite changes in timing and amplitude during curvewalking. Moreover, amplitude and timing characteristics of muscle activities were significantly correlated with the spatial and temporal gait adaptations that are associated with curvilinear locomotion. The present results reveal that fine-modulation of the muscle synergies underlying straight-ahead locomotion is enough to generate the adequate propulsive forces to steer walking and maintain balance. These findings suggest that the turn-related command operates by modulation of the phase relationships between the tightly coupled neuronal assemblies that drive motor neuron activity during walking. This would produce the invariant templates for locomotion kinematics that are at the base of human navigation in space.

Coordinated modulation of locomotor muscle synergies constructs straight-ahead and curvilinear walking in humans.

SCHIEPPATI, MARCO
2006-01-01

Abstract

We describe the muscle synergies accompanying steering of walking along curved trajectories, in order to analyze the simultaneous control of progression and balance-threatening emerging forces. For this purpose, we bilaterally recorded in ten subjects the electromyograms (EMGs) of a representative sample of leg and trunk muscles (n=16) during continuous walking along one straight and two curved trajectories at natural speed. Curvilinear locomotion involved a graded, limbdependent modulation of amplitude and timing of activity of the muscles of the legs and trunk. The turnrelated modulation of the motor pattern was highly coordinated amongst muscles and body sides. For all muscles, linear relationships were detected between the spatial and temporal features of muscle EMG activity. The largest modulation of EMG was observed in gastrocnemius medialis and lateralis muscles, which showed opposite changes in timing and amplitude during curvewalking. Moreover, amplitude and timing characteristics of muscle activities were significantly correlated with the spatial and temporal gait adaptations that are associated with curvilinear locomotion. The present results reveal that fine-modulation of the muscle synergies underlying straight-ahead locomotion is enough to generate the adequate propulsive forces to steer walking and maintain balance. These findings suggest that the turn-related command operates by modulation of the phase relationships between the tightly coupled neuronal assemblies that drive motor neuron activity during walking. This would produce the invariant templates for locomotion kinematics that are at the base of human navigation in space.
2006
Neurosciences & Behavior covers cellular and molecular neuroscience, neuronal development, basic and clinical neurology, psychology, psychiatry, and psychopharmacology. This category also includes experimental and biobehavioral psychology, molecular psychiatry, and studies of neuronal function underlying higher cognitive processes. Resources dealing with cognitive or behavioral clinical psychotherapy, psychological assessments, and case-books in clinical neurology are excluded.
Sì, ma tipo non specificato
Inglese
Internazionale
STAMPA
170
3
320
335
Locomotor synergies; straight-ahead; curvilinear walking
3
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
262
Courtine, G; Papaxanthis, C; Schieppati, Marco
1 Contributo su Rivista::1.1 Articolo in rivista
none
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11571/117637
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