Keime Marie, Chomienne Loïc, Goulon Cédric, Sainton Patrick, Lapole Thomas, Casanova Rémy, Bossard Martin, Nicol Caroline, Martha Cécile, Bolmont Benoit, Hays Arnaud, Vercruyssen Fabrice, Chavet Pascale, Bringoux Lionel
Aix Marseille University, CNRS, ISM, Marseille, France.
École Centrale Marseille, Marseille, France.
Front Physiol. 2023 Jul 31;14:1201253. doi: 10.3389/fphys.2023.1201253. eCollection 2023.
Motor control, including locomotion, strongly depends on the gravitational field. Recent developments such as lower-body positive pressure treadmills (LBPPT) have enabled studies on Earth about the effects of reduced body weight (BW) on walking and running, up to 60% BW. The present experiment was set up to further investigate adaptations to a more naturalistic simulated hypogravity, mimicking a Martian environment with additional visual information during running sessions on LBPPT. Twenty-nine participants performed three sessions of four successive five-min runs at preferred speed, alternating Earth- or simulated Mars-like gravity (100% vs. 38% BW). They were displayed visual scenes using a virtual reality headset to assess the effects of coherent visual flow while running. Running performance was characterized by normal ground reaction force and pelvic accelerations. The perceived upright and vection (visually-induced self-motion sensation)in dynamic visual environments were also investigated at the end of the different sessions. We found that BW reduction induced biomechanical adaptations independently of the visual context. Active peak force and stance time decreased, while flight time increased. Strong inter-individual differences in braking and push-off times appeared at 38% BW, which were not systematically observed in our previous studies at 80% and 60% BW. Additionally, the importance given to dynamic visual cues in the perceived upright diminished at 38% BW, suggesting an increased reliance on the egocentric body axis as a reference for verticality when the visual context is fully coherent with the previous locomotor activity. Also, while vection was found to decrease in case of a coherent visuomotor coupling at 100% BW (i.e., post-exposure influence), it remained unaffected by the visual context at 38% BW. Overall, our findings suggested that locomotor and perceptual adaptations were not similarly impacted, depending on the -simulated- gravity condition and visual context.
运动控制,包括行走,在很大程度上依赖于重力场。诸如下身正压跑步机(LBPPT)等最新技术发展,使得在地球上能够开展关于体重减轻(BW)对行走和跑步影响的研究,体重减轻幅度可达60%BW。本实验旨在进一步研究对更自然的模拟微重力环境的适应性,即在LBPPT上跑步时,通过额外的视觉信息来模拟火星环境。29名参与者以偏好速度进行了三个阶段的实验,每个阶段连续进行四次五分钟的跑步,分别在地球重力或模拟火星重力环境下(100%BW与38%BW)交替进行。实验过程中使用虚拟现实头戴式设备向他们展示视觉场景,以评估跑步时连贯视觉流的影响。跑步表现通过正常地面反作用力和骨盆加速度来表征。在不同阶段结束时,还研究了动态视觉环境中参与者对自身直立状态的感知以及视动错觉(视觉诱发的自我运动感觉)。我们发现,体重减轻会引发生物力学适应性变化,且这种变化与视觉环境无关。主动峰值力和支撑时间减少,而腾空时间增加。在38%BW时,个体在制动和蹬地时间上出现了显著差异,而在我们之前80%BW和60%BW的研究中并未系统观察到这种差异。此外,在38%BW时,参与者在感知直立状态时对动态视觉线索的重视程度降低,这表明当视觉环境与先前的运动活动完全一致时,参与者越来越依赖以自我为中心的身体轴作为垂直方向的参考。同样,虽然在100%BW时,发现连贯的视运动耦合会导致视动错觉减少(即暴露后的影响),但在38%BW时,视动错觉不受视觉环境的影响。总体而言,我们的研究结果表明,根据模拟重力条件和视觉环境的不同,运动和感知适应性受到的影响并不相同。