Wilmut K, Barnett A L
Perception and Motion Analysis Lab, Oxford Brookes University, Gipsy Lane, Oxford, OX3 0BP, UK.
Exp Brain Res. 2017 May;235(5):1531-1540. doi: 10.1007/s00221-017-4901-z. Epub 2017 Mar 1.
Obstacles often appear unexpectedly in our pathway and these require us to make adjustments to avoid collision. Previous research has demonstrated that healthy adults will make anticipatory adjustments to gait where they have been told there is the possibility of an obstacle appearing. One population that may find this type of anticipatory movement difficult is individuals with Developmental Coordination Disorder (DCD). The current study considered how individuals with and without DCD adjust to the possibility of an obstacle appearing which would require circumvention. Fortyfour individuals with DCD and 44 age-matched controls (aged from 7 to 34 years of age) walked down an 11 m walkway under three conditions. Initially they were told this was a clear pathway and nothing in the environment would change (1, no possibility of an obstacle, no obstacle). They then performed a series of trials in which a gate may (2, possibility of an obstacle, obstacle) or may not (3, possibility of an obstacle, no obstacle) partially obstruct their pathway. We found that all participants increased medio-lateral trunk acceleration when there was the possibility of an obstacle but before the obstacle appeared, in addition the typical adults and older children also increased step width. When describing circumvention we found that the younger children showed an increase in trunk velocity and acceleration in all three directions compared to older children and adults. We also found that the individuals with DCD adjusted their path sooner and deviated more than their peers. The degree of adjustment to step width in anticipation of an obstacle was related to later medio-lateral velocity and timing of the deviation. Therefore, the lack of 'readying' the system where there is the possibility of an obstacle appearing seen in the individuals with DCD and the younger typical children may explain the increased medio-lateral velocity seen during circumvention.
在我们前行的道路上,障碍常常出乎意料地出现,这就要求我们做出调整以避免碰撞。先前的研究表明,健康的成年人在得知可能会出现障碍物时,会对步态做出预期调整。有一类人群可能会觉得这种预期动作很困难,那就是患有发育性协调障碍(DCD)的个体。当前的研究探讨了患有和未患有DCD的个体如何应对可能出现的需要绕行的障碍物。44名患有DCD的个体和44名年龄匹配的对照组(年龄在7至34岁之间)在三种条件下沿着一条11米长的通道行走。起初,他们被告知这是一条畅通无阻的通道,环境中不会有任何变化(1,无障碍物可能性,无障碍物)。然后,他们进行了一系列试验,其中一扇门可能(2,有障碍物可能性,有障碍物)或可能不会(3,有障碍物可能性,无障碍物)部分阻挡他们的通道。我们发现,当有障碍物可能性但障碍物尚未出现时,所有参与者的躯干在内外侧方向的加速度都会增加,此外,典型的成年人和年龄较大的儿童步幅也会增加。在描述绕行情况时,我们发现与年龄较大的儿童和成年人相比,年龄较小的儿童在三个方向上的躯干速度和加速度都有所增加。我们还发现,患有DCD的个体比同龄人更早调整路径且偏离程度更大。预期障碍物时步幅的调整程度与随后的内外侧速度和偏离时间有关。因此,患有DCD的个体以及年龄较小的典型儿童在有障碍物出现可能性时缺乏对系统的“准备”,这可能解释了在绕行过程中出现的内外侧速度增加的现象。