Central programming of postural movements: adaptation to altered support-surface configurations
F. B. Horak and L. M. Nashner We studied the extent to which automatic postural actions in standing human subjects are organized by a limited repertoire of central motor programs. Subjects stood on support surfaces of various lengths, which forced them to adopt different postural movement strategies...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of neurophysiology 1986-06, Vol.55 (6), p.1369-1381 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | F. B. Horak and L. M. Nashner
We studied the extent to which automatic postural actions in standing human
subjects are organized by a limited repertoire of central motor programs.
Subjects stood on support surfaces of various lengths, which forced them to
adopt different postural movement strategies to compensate for the same
external perturbations. We assessed whether a continuum or a limited set of
muscle activation patterns was used to produce different movement patterns
and the extent to which movement patterns were influenced by prior
experience. Exposing subjects standing on a normal support surface to brief
forward and backward horizontal surface perturbations elicited relatively
stereotyped patterns of leg and trunk muscle activation with 73- to 110-ms
latencies. Activity began in the ankle joint muscles and then radiated in
sequence to thigh and then trunk muscles on the same dorsal or ventral
aspect of the body. This activation pattern exerted compensatory torques
about the ankle joints, which restored equilibrium by moving the body
center of mass forward or backward. This pattern has been termed the ankle
strategy because it restores equilibrium by moving the body primarily
around the ankle joints. To successfully maintain balance while standing on
a support surface short in relation to foot length, subjects activated leg
and trunk muscles at similar latencies but organized the activity
differently. The trunk and thigh muscles antagonistic to those used in the
ankle strategy were activated in the opposite proximal-to-distal sequence,
whereas the ankle muscles were generally unresponsive. This activation
pattern produced a compensatory horizontal shear force against the support
surface but little, if any, ankle torque. This pattern has been termed the
hip strategy, because the resulting motion is focused primarily about the
hip joints. Exposing subjects to horizontal surface perturbations while
standing on support surfaces intermediate in length between the shortest
and longest elicited more complex postural movements and associated muscle
activation patterns that resembled ankle and hip strategies combined in
different temporal relations. These complex postural movements were
executed with combinations of torque and horizontal shear forces and
motions of ankle and hip joints. During the first 5-20 practice trials
immediately following changes from one support surface length to another,
response latencies were unchanged. The activation patterns, |
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ISSN: | 0022-3077 1522-1598 |
DOI: | 10.1152/jn.1986.55.6.1369 |