de Poel Harjo J, Roerdink Melvyn, Peper C Lieke E, Beek Peter J
Department of Human Movement Sciences, University Medical Center Groningen (UMCG), University of Groningen, Antonius Deusinglaan 1, 9713 AV Groningen, The Netherlands.
Department of Human Movement Sciences, Faculty of Behavioural and Movement Sciences, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Amsterdam Movement Sciences, van der Boechorststraat 7-9, 1081 BT Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Brain Sci. 2020 Oct 13;10(10):724. doi: 10.3390/brainsci10100724.
The stability of rhythmic interlimb coordination is governed by the coupling between limb movements. While it is amply documented how coordinative performance depends on movement frequency, theoretical considerations and recent empirical findings suggest that interlimb coupling (and hence coordinative stability) is actually mediated more by movement amplitude. Here, we present the results of a reanalysis of the data of Post, Peper, and Beek (2000), which were collected in an experiment aimed at teasing apart the effects of frequency and amplitude on coordinative stability of both steady-state and perturbed in-phase and antiphase interlimb coordination. The dataset in question was selected because we found indications that the according results were prone to artifacts, which may have obscured the potential effects of amplitude on the post-perturbation stability of interlimb coordination. We therefore redid the same analysis based on movement signals that were normalized each half-cycle for variations in oscillation center and movement frequency. With this refined analysis we found that (1) stability of both steady-state and perturbed coordination indeed seemed to depend more on amplitude than on movement frequency per se, and that (2) whereas steady-state antiphase coordination became less stable with increasing frequency for prescribed amplitudes, in-phase coordination became more stable at higher frequencies. Such effects may have been obscured in previous studies due to (1) unnoticed changes in performed amplitudes, and/or (2) artifacts related to inappropriate data normalization. The results of the present reanalysis therefore give cause for reconsidering the relation between the frequency, amplitude, and stability of interlimb coordination.
节律性肢体间协调的稳定性由肢体运动之间的耦合作用所支配。虽然已有大量文献记载了协调表现如何依赖于运动频率,但理论思考和近期的实证研究结果表明,肢体间耦合(进而协调稳定性)实际上更多地是由运动幅度介导的。在此,我们展示了对波斯特、佩珀和贝克(2000年)数据重新分析的结果,这些数据是在一项旨在区分频率和幅度对稳态及受扰动的同相和反相肢体间协调稳定性影响的实验中收集的。之所以选择该数据集,是因为我们发现有迹象表明相应结果容易受到伪影的影响,这些伪影可能掩盖了幅度对肢体间协调扰动后稳定性的潜在影响。因此,我们基于每个半周期针对振荡中心和运动频率变化进行归一化处理的运动信号重新进行了相同的分析。通过这种精细分析,我们发现:(1)稳态和受扰动协调的稳定性确实似乎更多地取决于幅度而非运动频率本身;(2)对于规定幅度,虽然稳态反相协调随着频率增加变得不太稳定,但同相协调在较高频率下变得更稳定。由于(1)执行幅度未被注意到的变化,和/或(2)与不适当数据归一化相关的伪影,这些效应在先前的研究中可能被掩盖了。因此,本次重新分析的结果引发了对肢体间协调的频率、幅度和稳定性之间关系的重新思考。