Clayton Hilary M, Hobbs Sarah Jane
Department of Large Animal Clinical Sciences, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, United States of America.
Centre for Applied Sport and Exercise Sciences, University of Central Lancashire, Preston, Lancashire, United Kingdom.
PeerJ. 2017 Sep 28;5:e3866. doi: 10.7717/peerj.3866. eCollection 2017.
Locomotion results from the generation of ground reaction forces (GRF) that cause translations of the center of mass (COM) and generate moments that rotate the body around the COM. The trot is a diagonally-synchronized gait performed by horses at intermediate locomotor speeds. Passage is a variant of the trot performed by highly-trained dressage horses. It is distinguished from trot by having a slow speed of progression combined with great animation of the limbs in the swing phase. The slow speed of passage challenges the horse's ability to control the sagittal-plane moments around the COM. Footfall patterns and peak GRF are known to differ between passage and trot, but their effects on balance management, which we define here as the ability to control nose-up/nose-down pitching moments around the horse's COM to maintain a state of equilibrium, are not known. The objective was to investigate which biomechanical variables influence pitching moments around the COM in passage.
Three highly-trained dressage horses were captured by a 10-camera motion analysis system (120 Hz) as they were ridden in passage over four force platforms (960 Hz). A full-body marker set was used to track the horse's COM and measure balance variables including total body center of pressure (COP), pitching moments, diagonal dissociation timing, peak force production, limb protraction-retraction, and trunk posture. A total of twenty passage steps were extracted and partial correlation (accounting for horse) was used to investigate significant ( < 0.05) relationships between variables.
Hindlimb mean protraction-retraction correlated significantly with peak hindlimb propulsive forces ( = 0.821; < 0.01), mean pitching moments ( = 0.546, = 0.016), trunk range of motion, COM craniocaudal location and diagonal dissociation time ( < 0.05).
Pitching moments around the COM were controlled by a combination of kinematic and kinetic adjustments that involve coordinated changes in GRF magnitudes, GRF distribution between the diagonal limb pairs, and the moment arms of the vertical GRFs. The moment arms depend on hoof placements relative to the COM, which were adjusted by changing limb protraction-retraction angles. Nose-up pitching moments could also be increased by providing a larger hindlimb propulsive GRF.
运动是由地面反作用力(GRF)产生的,地面反作用力会导致质心(COM)平移,并产生使身体围绕质心旋转的力矩。快步是马匹在中等运动速度下执行的对角同步步态。慢步是由训练有素的盛装舞步马执行的快步变体。它与快步的区别在于前进速度较慢,同时摆动阶段肢体的动作幅度较大。慢步的低速度对马控制围绕质心的矢状面力矩的能力提出了挑战。已知慢步和快步之间的脚步模式和峰值GRF有所不同,但它们对平衡管理的影响尚不清楚,我们在此将平衡管理定义为控制马的质心周围的抬头/低头俯仰力矩以维持平衡状态的能力。目的是研究哪些生物力学变量会影响慢步时围绕质心的俯仰力矩。
三匹训练有素的盛装舞步马在经过四个测力平台(960Hz)进行慢步时,由一个10台摄像机的运动分析系统(120Hz)进行捕捉。使用全身标记集来跟踪马的质心,并测量平衡变量,包括全身压力中心(COP)、俯仰力矩、对角解离时间、峰值力产生、肢体伸展-收缩以及躯干姿势。总共提取了二十个慢步步骤,并使用偏相关分析(考虑马匹因素)来研究变量之间的显著关系(<0.05)。
后肢平均伸展-收缩与后肢峰值推进力(=0.821;<0.01)、平均俯仰力矩(=0.546,=0.016)、躯干运动范围、质心的头尾位置和对角解离时间显著相关(<0.05)。
围绕质心的俯仰力矩是通过运动学和动力学调整的组合来控制的,这些调整涉及GRF大小的协调变化、对角肢体对之间的GRF分布以及垂直GRF的力臂。力臂取决于蹄相对于质心的位置,通过改变肢体伸展-收缩角度来进行调整。通过提供更大的后肢推进GRF也可以增加抬头俯仰力矩。