Groff Boman R, Antonellis Prokopios, Schmid Kendra K, Knarr Brian A, Stergiou Nicholas
Department of Biomechanics and Center for Research in Human Movement Variability, College of Education, University of Nebraska at Omaha, 6160 University Drive South, Omaha, NE, 68182-0860, USA.
Department of Biostatistics, College of Public Health, University of Nebraska Medical Center, 984375 Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, NE, 68198-4375, USA.
Neurosci Lett. 2019 Jan 23;692:150-158. doi: 10.1016/j.neulet.2018.10.022. Epub 2018 Oct 24.
Previous research has used functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) to show that motor areas of the cortex are activated more while walking backward compared to walking forward. It is also known that head movement creates motion artifacts in fNIRS data. The aim of this study was to investigate cortical activation during forward and backward walking, while also measuring head movement. We hypothesized that greater activation in motor areas while walking backward would be concurrent with increased head movement. Participants performed forward and backward walking on a treadmill. Participants wore motion capture markers on their head to quantify head movement and pressure sensors on their feet to calculate stride-time. fNIRS was placed over motor areas of the cortex to measure cortical activation. Measurements were compared for forward and backward walking conditions. No significant differences in body movement or head movement were observed between forward and backward walking conditions, suggesting that conditional differences in movement did not influence fNIRS results. Stride-time was significantly shorter during backward walking than during forward walking, but not more variable. There were no differences in activation for motor areas of the cortex when outliers were removed. However, there was a positive correlation between stride-time variability and activation in the primary motor cortex. This positive correlation between motor cortex activation and stride-time variability suggests that forward walking variability may be represented in the primary motor cortex.
先前的研究使用功能近红外光谱技术(fNIRS)表明,与向前行走相比,向后行走时大脑皮层的运动区域激活程度更高。众所周知,头部运动会在fNIRS数据中产生运动伪影。本研究的目的是在测量头部运动的同时,探究向前和向后行走过程中的皮层激活情况。我们假设向后行走时运动区域的更大激活将与头部运动增加同时出现。参与者在跑步机上进行向前和向后行走。参与者在头部佩戴运动捕捉标记以量化头部运动,并在脚上佩戴压力传感器以计算步幅时间。将fNIRS放置在大脑皮层的运动区域上方以测量皮层激活。比较了向前和向后行走条件下的测量结果。向前和向后行走条件之间未观察到身体运动或头部运动的显著差异,这表明运动条件差异不会影响fNIRS结果。向后行走时的步幅时间明显短于向前行走时,但变异性并不更大。去除异常值后,大脑皮层运动区域的激活没有差异。然而,步幅时间变异性与初级运动皮层的激活之间存在正相关。运动皮层激活与步幅时间变异性之间的这种正相关表明,向前行走的变异性可能在初级运动皮层中得到体现。