Lim Jongil, Busa Michael A, van Emmerik Richard E A, Hamill Joseph
Motor Control Laboratory, Department of Kinesiology, University of Massachusetts Amherst, Amherst, MA, United States; Biomechanics Laboratory, Department of Kinesiology, University of Massachusetts Amherst, Amherst, MA, United States.
Motor Control Laboratory, Department of Kinesiology, University of Massachusetts Amherst, Amherst, MA, United States; Biomechanics Laboratory, Department of Kinesiology, University of Massachusetts Amherst, Amherst, MA, United States.
J Biomech. 2017 Feb 8;52:122-129. doi: 10.1016/j.jbiomech.2016.12.020. Epub 2016 Dec 29.
This study aimed to identify adaptive changes in running kinematics and impact shock transmission as a function of head stability requirements. Fifteen strides from twelve recreational runners were collected during preferred speed treadmill running. Head stability demands were manipulated through real-time visual feedback that required head-gaze orientation to maintain within boxes of different sizes, ranging from 21° to 3° of visual angle with 3° decrements. The main outcome measures were tibial and head peak accelerations in the time and frequency domains (impact and active phases), shock transmission from tibia to head, stride parameters, and sagittal plane joint kinematics. Increasing head stability requirements resulted in decreases in the amplitude and integrated power of head acceleration during the active phase of stance. During the impact portion of stance tibial and head acceleration and shock transmission remained similar across visual conditions. In response to increased head stability requirements, participants increased stride frequency approximately 8% above preferred, as well as hip flexion angle at impact; stance time and knee and ankle joint angles at impact did not change. Changes in lower limb joint configurations (smaller hip extension and ankle plantar-flexion and greater knee flexion) occurred at toe-off and likely contributed to reducing the vertical displacement of the center of mass with increased head stability demands. These adaptive changes in the lower limb enabled runners to increase the time that voluntary control is allowed without embedding additional impact loadings, and therefore active control of the head orientation was facilitated in response to different visual task constraints.
本研究旨在确定跑步运动学和冲击震动传递的适应性变化与头部稳定性要求之间的关系。在跑步机上以偏好速度跑步时,收集了12名业余跑步者的15步运动数据。通过实时视觉反馈来控制头部稳定性要求,即要求头部注视方向保持在不同大小的方框内,视角范围从21°到3°,每次递减3°。主要测量指标包括胫骨和头部在时域和频域(冲击阶段和主动阶段)的峰值加速度、从胫骨到头部的震动传递、步幅参数以及矢状面关节运动学。增加头部稳定性要求会导致站立主动阶段头部加速度的幅度和积分功率降低。在站立冲击阶段,胫骨和头部加速度以及震动传递在不同视觉条件下保持相似。为响应增加的头部稳定性要求,参与者将步频提高至比偏好步频高出约8%,同时增加了冲击时的髋关节屈曲角度;冲击时的站立时间以及膝关节和踝关节角度没有变化。在蹬离地面时下肢关节构型发生了变化(髋关节伸展减小、踝关节跖屈减小、膝关节屈曲增大),这可能有助于在头部稳定性要求增加时减少质心的垂直位移。下肢的这些适应性变化使跑步者能够在不增加额外冲击负荷的情况下增加自主控制的时间,从而便于根据不同的视觉任务约束对头部方向进行主动控制。