Potocanac Zrinka, Pijnappels Mirjam, Verschueren Sabine, van Dieën Jaap, Duysens Jacques
Department of Kinesiology, KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium;
Department of Human Movement Sciences, MOVE Research Institute Amsterdam, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, the Netherlands; and.
J Neurophysiol. 2016 Jan 1;115(1):143-56. doi: 10.1152/jn.00263.2015. Epub 2015 Nov 11.
Studies on neural decision making mostly investigated fast corrective adjustments of arm movements. However, fast leg movement corrections deserve attention as well, since they are often required to avoid falling after balance perturbations. The present study aimed at elucidating the mechanisms behind fast corrections of tripping responses by analyzing the concomitant leg muscle activity changes. This was investigated in seven young adults who were tripped in between normal walking trials and took a recovery step by elevating the tripped leg over the obstacle. In some trials, a forbidden landing zone (FZ) was presented behind the obstacle, at the subjects' preferred foot landing position, forcing a step correction. Muscle activity of the tripped leg gastrocnemius medialis (iGM), tibialis anterior (iTA), rectus femoris (iRF), and biceps femoris (iBF) muscles was compared between normal trips presented before any FZ appearance, trips with a FZ, and normal trips presented in between trips with a FZ ("catch" trials). When faced with a real or expected (catch trials) FZ, subjects shortened their recovery steps. The underlying changes in muscle activity consisted of two stages. The first stage involved reduced iGM activity, occurring at a latency shorter than voluntary reaction, followed by reduced iTA and increased iBF and iGM activities occurring at longer latencies. The fast response was not related to step shortening, but longer latency responses clearly were functional. We suggest that the initial response possibly acts as a "pause," allowing the nervous system to integrate the necessary information and prepare the subsequent, functional movement adjustment.
关于神经决策的研究大多集中在手臂运动的快速纠正调整上。然而,快速的腿部运动纠正也值得关注,因为在平衡受到干扰后,通常需要通过这种方式来避免摔倒。本研究旨在通过分析伴随的腿部肌肉活动变化,阐明绊倒反应快速纠正背后的机制。研究选取了7名年轻成年人,在他们正常行走过程中使其绊倒,然后通过将绊倒的腿抬高越过障碍物来采取恢复步骤。在一些试验中,在障碍物后方受试者偏好的脚落地位置设置了一个禁区(FZ),以迫使他们进行步幅纠正。比较了在任何FZ出现之前的正常绊倒、有FZ的绊倒以及在有FZ的绊倒之间的正常绊倒(“捕捉”试验)过程中,绊倒腿的内侧腓肠肌(iGM)、胫骨前肌(iTA)、股直肌(iRF)和股二头肌(iBF)的肌肉活动。当面对真实的或预期的(捕捉试验)FZ时,受试者缩短了他们的恢复步幅。肌肉活动的潜在变化包括两个阶段。第一阶段涉及iGM活动减少,其潜伏期短于自主反应,随后是iTA活动减少以及iBF和iGM活动在更长潜伏期增加。快速反应与步幅缩短无关,但较长潜伏期的反应显然是起作用的。我们认为,最初的反应可能起到“暂停”的作用,使神经系统能够整合必要的信息并为随后的功能性运动调整做好准备。