Department of Kinesiology, West Chester University of PA, United States; Department of Evolution, Ecology, and Organismal Biology, University of California, Riverside, United States.
Department of Kinesiology, West Chester University of PA, United States.
J Biomech. 2024 Mar;166:112023. doi: 10.1016/j.jbiomech.2024.112023. Epub 2024 Feb 22.
In locomotion, the relative phasing of the limbs changes with speed and provides valuable insight to neuromuscular control of gait. At present, it is unknown if individuals trained in sprinting coordinate their limbs differently than runners from other athletic backgrounds. Therefore, we aimed to characterize the effects of speed and skill on lower limb coordination. Twenty-five physically active (PA) and fifteen track and field (TF) athletes performed 40 m running trials at self-selected speeds, from jogging to maximal sprinting. We measured lower limb kinematics during steady-speed running, and quantified coordination using continuous relative phase (CRP) methods for interlimb pairs (Thigh-Thigh, Shank-Shank) and intralimb pairs (Shank-Thigh). Regression techniques showed between-group differences in scaling of coordination with speed during the stance phase, such that coordination was significantly more antiphase during jogging and running speeds in TF. During flight the scaling between groups was similar, but there were persistent and significant differences in coordination across all speeds. Comparing only the maximal speed trials, we found interlimb coordination was significantly more antiphase for TF in both stance and flight. In all cases, Shank-Shank coordination showed the largest between-group differences. Our results demonstrate the importance of interlimb coordination at maximal sprint speed, particularly during the flight phase and between shank segments. Between-group differences in coordination at slower speeds suggest a selective tuning of coordination in trained runners. We speculate differences in limb coordination are due to acquired motor patterns from optimizing forward velocity and its mechanical determinants, which differ particularly during flight/swing and between shank segments.
在运动中,肢体的相对相位随速度而变化,为步态的神经肌肉控制提供了有价值的见解。目前尚不清楚接受短跑训练的个体与来自其他运动背景的跑步者相比,是否协调他们的四肢。因此,我们旨在描述速度和技能对下肢协调的影响。25 名身体素质良好的运动员(PA)和 15 名田径运动员(TF)以自我选择的速度完成了 40 米跑步试验,从慢跑到最大冲刺速度。我们在稳定速度跑步期间测量下肢运动学,并使用连续相对相位(CRP)方法对肢体间对(大腿-大腿、小腿-小腿)和肢体内对(小腿-大腿)进行协调量化。回归技术显示,在支撑阶段,协调与速度之间的组间存在差异,即 TF 在慢跑和跑步速度时协调明显更反相位。在飞行阶段,组间的比例相似,但在所有速度下,协调都存在持续且显著的差异。仅比较最大速度试验,我们发现 TF 在支撑和飞行阶段的最大速度时,肢体间协调明显更反相位。在所有情况下,小腿-小腿协调显示出最大的组间差异。我们的结果表明,在最大冲刺速度下,肢体间协调非常重要,尤其是在飞行阶段和小腿段之间。在较慢速度下的协调组间差异表明,受过训练的跑步者对协调进行了选择性调整。我们推测,肢体协调的差异是由于优化前进速度及其机械决定因素的获得性运动模式所致,这些差异在飞行/摆动和小腿段之间尤为明显。