Pechette Markley Arielle, Wood Moriah K, Shoben Abigail B, Olson Rachel A
Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, United States.
Red Sage Integrative Veterinary Partners, Fort Collins, CO, United States.
Front Vet Sci. 2024 Dec 4;11:1492391. doi: 10.3389/fvets.2024.1492391. eCollection 2024.
During agility performance, dogs complete a preset obstacle course. The teeter, also known as the seesaw, is the only dynamic contact obstacle. Dogs handle dynamic obstacles differently than static obstacles due to the need for increased coordination and postural control. No studies have been performed evaluating dogs' abilities or biomechanical strategies to navigate the teeter. The goal of this study was to describe and quantify variability in teeter performance across a sample of dogs of differing body mass and breeds.
Twenty dogs of various body masses and breeds were recruited. Handlers were instructed to line their dog up approximately 5 m from the teeter and to handle the obstacle in a way to best reflect the dog's typical performance. Repetitions were filmed using a GoPro Hero 11 at 240 frames per second. Data were post processed and footfalls were manually tracked using XMALab. Descriptive statistics were used to describe both central tendency and variability.
Mean total obstacle completion time (from dog breaking the plane of the teeter until teeter contact with ground) was 1.31 s (sd = 0.38) and mean total footfalls on the teeter was 18.3 (sd = 3.4). Footfall patterns varied across all phases of teeter performance, with particularly noteworthy variation during descent while the teeter was moving. Some dogs were nearly completely stationary while the teeter dropped while others continued to take steps toward the end of the obstacle as the teeter was in motion. Smaller dogs had more total footfalls and longer teeter completion times than larger dogs, and dogs with a stopped contact behavior took longer to fully exit the teeter after it contacted the ground.
These data imply that dogs use a variety of biomechanical strategies to perform a dynamic obstacle. Results of this study provide insight into teeter performance and variables that can be utilized for evaluation in future biomechanical studies. This study also provides initial data on biomechanical strategies used by dogs on dynamic surfaces, which may offer insight into dynamic stability and postural control in dogs and how that may influence injury development during sport.
在敏捷运动表演中,狗狗们要完成一个预设的障碍课程。跷跷板,也被称为跷跷板,是唯一的动态接触障碍。由于需要增强协调性和姿势控制,狗狗处理动态障碍的方式与静态障碍不同。目前尚未有研究评估狗狗在跷跷板上的能力或生物力学策略。本研究的目的是描述和量化不同体重和品种的狗狗样本在跷跷板表现上的变异性。
招募了20只不同体重和品种的狗狗。训练者被指示让他们的狗狗在距离跷跷板约5米处排好队,并以最能反映狗狗典型表现的方式处理障碍。使用GoPro Hero 11以每秒240帧的速度拍摄重复动作。数据进行后期处理,并使用XMALab手动跟踪脚步。描述性统计用于描述集中趋势和变异性。
平均总障碍完成时间(从狗狗打破跷跷板平面到跷跷板接触地面)为1.31秒(标准差=0.38),平均在跷跷板上的总脚步数为18.3次(标准差=3.4)。在跷跷板表演的所有阶段,脚步模式都有所不同,在跷跷板下降且移动时尤其值得注意。当跷跷板下降时,一些狗狗几乎完全静止,而另一些狗狗在跷跷板移动时继续朝着障碍末端迈步。体型较小的狗狗总脚步数更多,跷跷板完成时间比体型较大的狗狗更长,并且有停止接触行为的狗狗在跷跷板接触地面后完全离开跷跷板所需的时间更长。
这些数据表明狗狗使用多种生物力学策略来完成动态障碍。本研究结果为跷跷板表现以及可用于未来生物力学研究评估的变量提供了见解。本研究还提供了关于狗狗在动态表面上使用的生物力学策略的初步数据,这可能有助于深入了解狗狗的动态稳定性和姿势控制,以及这可能如何影响运动过程中的损伤发展。