Zettel John L, McIlroy William E, Maki Brian E
Institute of Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada.
Exp Brain Res. 2002 Aug;145(3):297-308. doi: 10.1007/s00221-002-1083-z. Epub 2002 Jun 19.
This study examined whether the stabilizing features of rapid triggered compensatory stepping reactions can be modulated to accommodate an environmental constraint, in the form of an obstacle placed in front of the subject. The compensatory stepping reactions were evoked, in 11 healthy young adults, by unpredictable multidirectional platform translation; the forward-step reactions evoked by large backward translations were analyzed. Clearance of the obstacle required a doubling of the usual (no obstacle) swing duration and therein presented significant challenges to both anteroposterior (a-p) and lateral stability, yet the central nervous system (CNS) was able to decelerate and stabilize the body's center of mass (COM) without taking additional steps. Findings that the response was modulated successfully without prior practice or exposure to the perturbation suggest that the CNS automatically incorporates exteroceptive information into the control of compensatory stepping. Control of a-p stability appeared primarily to involve an increase in forward step distance. Surprisingly, the control of lateral stability involved both an anticipatory postural adjustment (APA) and lateral step placement. By including a much larger APA prior to foot-lift (137% increase in amplitude and 50% increase in duration versus no-obstacle trials), the COM was propelled to a more stable position prior to swing phase. This was achieved with minimal (32 ms) delay in foot-lift, due, in part, to more rapid initiation and execution of limb unloading. In contrast to previous findings that APAs are commonly absent or severely reduced during compensatory stepping, the present results demonstrate that large APAs can be incorporated into these reactions when demanded by task conditions. However, these large APAs were still insufficient to counter the increased tendency of the COM to fall during the prolonged swing phase. The fact that the APA was included at all may indicate a hybrid control, in which predictive control (via APA) is used to reduce the anticipated lateral instability, and reactive control of the final foot placement, governed by sensory discharge related to the actual COM motion, provides any additional stabilization required.
本研究探讨了快速触发的代偿性踏步反应的稳定特征是否能够被调节,以适应环境限制,具体形式为在受试者前方放置一个障碍物。在11名健康的年轻成年人中,通过不可预测的多方向平台平移诱发代偿性踏步反应;分析了由大幅度向后平移诱发的向前踏步反应。越过障碍物需要将通常(无障碍物)的摆动持续时间加倍,这对前后(a-p)稳定性和侧向稳定性都提出了重大挑战,然而中枢神经系统(CNS)能够在不采取额外步骤的情况下使身体重心(COM)减速并稳定下来。研究结果表明,在没有事先练习或接触扰动的情况下,反应能够成功调节,这表明中枢神经系统会自动将外感受信息纳入代偿性踏步的控制中。对前后稳定性的控制似乎主要涉及向前步幅的增加。令人惊讶的是,对侧向稳定性的控制既涉及预期姿势调整(APA),也涉及侧向步幅的放置。通过在抬脚前增加更大幅度的预期姿势调整(与无障碍物试验相比,幅度增加137%,持续时间增加50%),在摆动阶段之前将重心推进到更稳定的位置。这在抬脚时延迟最小(32毫秒)的情况下实现,部分原因是肢体卸载的启动和执行更快。与之前关于代偿性踏步过程中通常不存在或严重减少预期姿势调整的研究结果相反,本研究结果表明,当任务条件需要时,大幅度的预期姿势调整可以纳入这些反应中。然而,这些大幅度的预期姿势调整仍不足以抵消在延长的摆动阶段重心下降增加的趋势。预期姿势调整的存在这一事实可能表明存在一种混合控制,其中预测性控制(通过预期姿势调整)用于减少预期的侧向不稳定性,而由与实际重心运动相关的感觉放电控制的最终足部放置的反应性控制提供任何额外所需的稳定性。