Université de Poitiers, ISAE-ENSMA, CNRS, PPRIME, Poitiers, France; Université de Poitiers, CNRS, CERCA, Poitiers, France.
Université de Poitiers, ISAE-ENSMA, CNRS, PPRIME, Poitiers, France.
Hum Mov Sci. 2024 Dec;98:103297. doi: 10.1016/j.humov.2024.103297. Epub 2024 Oct 9.
Gravity is a ubiquitous external force that must be considered when producing coordinated movements. Drop-landing is a popular task to study how humans cope with gravity, because anticipatory muscle activations can be released before the estimated ground contact. But the consequences of these anticipatory muscle activations have only been interpreted in terms of stiffening the lower-limbs in preparation for ground contact, without considering potential anticipatory kinematic consequences. The objective of this study is to quantify the kinematic consequences of anticipatory muscle activations in two different landing tasks, to clarify whether anticipatory muscle activations are adapted to cope with gravity, to the dynamic constraints of the movement to perform, or both. Twenty young athletes performed drop-landing and drop-jumping from a 35 cm elevated platform. Sagittal angles and angular velocities of the hip, knee, and ankle joints, and acceleration of the foot were computed, as well as the onset of joint flexions and onset of foot vertical acceleration change. We found the same pattern of anticipatory hip and knee flexion, both starting before ground contact in all participants and in both tasks. We found no anticipatory kinematics for the ankle joint. Consecutive to the hip and knee flexion, the foot accelerated upwards before ground contact. Our results show that anticipatory muscle activations used by humans have systematic and invariant kinematic consequences during the air-time phase to cope with gravity: they initiate the hip and knee joints flexion before ground contact. This strategy likely limits the amount of ground reaction forces developed to oppose the gravity external force, and completes the stiffening role already described in the literature. These two complementary consequences -rotation and stiffening- seem to serve the same purpose of protecting the skeletal system. Since gravity is ubiquitous, these automated movements must be considered in other movements involving landing phases, such as heel strikes during gait.
重力是一种无处不在的外力,在产生协调运动时必须考虑到。落地是研究人类如何应对重力的一种流行任务,因为可以在估计的地面接触之前释放预期的肌肉激活。但是,这些预期的肌肉激活的后果仅根据准备地面接触时下肢的僵硬程度来解释,而没有考虑潜在的预期运动学后果。本研究的目的是量化两种不同着陆任务中预期肌肉激活的运动学后果,以澄清预期的肌肉激活是适应应对重力,还是适应运动执行的动态约束,或者两者兼而有之。二十名年轻运动员从 35 厘米高的平台上进行了落地和跳落。计算了髋关节、膝关节和踝关节的矢状角度和角速度,以及脚的加速度,以及关节屈曲的开始和脚垂直加速度变化的开始。我们发现所有参与者和两种任务中都存在相同的预期髋关节和膝关节屈曲模式,都在地面接触之前开始。我们没有发现踝关节的预期运动学。髋关节和膝关节屈曲后,脚在地面接触前向上加速。我们的结果表明,人类使用的预期肌肉激活在空气时间阶段具有系统和不变的运动学后果,以应对重力:它们在地面接触之前开始髋关节和膝关节的屈曲。这种策略可能会限制为对抗重力外力而产生的地面反作用力的大小,并完成文献中已经描述的僵硬作用。这两个互补的后果——旋转和僵硬——似乎服务于相同的目的,即保护骨骼系统。由于重力无处不在,因此在涉及着陆阶段的其他运动中,例如步态中的脚跟撞击,必须考虑这些自动运动。