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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 81 No. 5 May 1999, pp. 2325-2339
Copyright ©1999 by the American Physiological Society
Neurological Sciences Institute, Oregon Health Sciences University, Portland, Oregon 97209
Buchanan, John J. and
Fay B. Horak.
Emergence of Postural Patterns as a Function of Vision and
Translation Frequency. J. Neurophysiol. 81: 2325-2339, 1999.
Emergence of postural patterns as a function of vision and translation
frequency. We examined the frequency characteristics of human
postural coordination and the role of visual information in this
coordination. Eight healthy adults maintained balance in stance during
sinusoidal support surface translations (12 cm peak to peak) in the
anterior-posterior direction at six different frequencies. Changes in
kinematic and dynamic measures revealed that both sensory and
biomechanical constraints limit postural coordination patterns as a
function of translation frequency. At slow frequencies (0.1 and 0.25 Hz), subjects ride the platform (with the eyes open or closed). For
fast frequencies (1.0 and 1.25 Hz) with the eyes open, subjects fix
their head and upper trunk in space. With the eyes closed,
large-amplitude, slow-sway motion of the head and trunk occurred for
fast frequencies above 0.5 Hz. Visual information stabilized posture by
reducing the variability of the head's position in space and the
position of the center of mass (CoM) within the support surface defined
by the feet for all but the slowest translation frequencies. When subjects rode the platform, there was little oscillatory joint motion,
with muscle activity limited mostly to the ankles. To support the head
fixed in space and slow-sway postural patterns, subjects produced
stable interjoint hip and ankle joint coordination patterns. This
increase in joint motion of the lower body dissipated the energy input
by fast translation frequencies and facilitated the control of upper
body motion. CoM amplitude decreased with increasing translation
frequency, whereas the center of pressure amplitude increased with
increasing translation frequency. Our results suggest that visual
information was important to maintaining a fixed position of the head
and trunk in space, whereas proprioceptive information was sufficient
to produce stable coordinative patterns between the support surface and
legs. The CNS organizes postural patterns in this balance task as a
function of available sensory information, biomechanical constraints,
and translation frequency.
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