Dominici Nadia, Daprati Elena, Nico Daniele, Cappellini Germana, Ivanenko Yuri P, Lacquaniti Francesco
Department of Neuromotor Physiology, IRCCS Fondazione Santa Lucia, Rome, Italy.
J Neurophysiol. 2009 Mar;101(3):1419-29. doi: 10.1152/jn.91165.2008. Epub 2008 Dec 17.
When walking, step length provides critical information on traveled distance along the ongoing path [corrected] Little is known on the role that knowledge about body dimensions plays within this process. Here we directly addressed this question by evaluating whether changes in body proportions interfere with computation of traveled distance for targets located outside the reaching space. We studied locomotion and distance estimation in an achondroplastic child (ACH, 11 yr) before and after surgical elongation of the shank segments of both lower limbs and in healthy adults walking on stilts, designed to mimic shank-segment elongation. Kinematic analysis of gait revealed that dynamic coupling of the thigh, shank, and foot segments changed substantially as a result of elongation. Step length remained unvaried, in spite of the significant increase in total limb length ( approximately 1.5-fold). These relatively shorter strides resulted from smaller oscillations of the shank segment, as would be predicted by proportional increments in limb size and not by asymmetrical segmental increment as in the present case (length of thighs was not modified). Distance estimation was measured by walking with eyes closed toward a memorized target. Before surgery, the behavior of ACH was comparable to that of typically developing participants. In contrast, following shank elongation, the ACH walked significantly shorter distances when aiming at the same targets. Comparable changes in limb kinematics, stride length, and estimation of traveled distance were found in adults wearing on stilts, suggesting that path integration errors in both cases were related to alterations in the intersegmental coordination of the walking limbs. The results are consistent with a dynamic locomotor body schema used for controlling step length and path estimation, based on inherent relationships between gait parameters and body proportions.
行走时,步长提供了沿行进路径所走过距离的关键信息。目前对于身体尺寸知识在这一过程中所起的作用知之甚少。在此,我们通过评估身体比例的变化是否会干扰对伸手可及空间之外目标的行进距离计算,直接解决了这个问题。我们研究了一名软骨发育不全儿童(ACH,11岁)在双侧下肢小腿节段手术延长前后的运动和距离估计,以及在模仿小腿节段延长的情况下,健康成年人踩高跷行走时的运动和距离估计。步态的运动学分析表明,由于延长,大腿、小腿和足部节段的动态耦合发生了显著变化。尽管肢体总长度显著增加(约1.5倍),步长仍保持不变。这些相对较短的步幅是由小腿节段较小的摆动导致的,正如肢体尺寸按比例增加所预测的那样,而不是像本例中那样由不对称的节段增加(大腿长度未改变)导致的。距离估计是通过闭眼朝着记忆中的目标行走来测量的。手术前,ACH的行为与正常发育参与者相当。相比之下,小腿延长后,ACH在瞄准相同目标时行走的距离明显缩短。在踩高跷的成年人中也发现了类似的肢体运动学、步长和行进距离估计的变化,这表明两种情况下的路径整合误差都与行走肢体节段间协调的改变有关。这些结果与基于步态参数和身体比例之间的内在关系,用于控制步长和路径估计的动态运动身体图式一致。