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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 81 No. 6 June 1999, pp. 2914-2922
Copyright ©1999 by the American Physiological Society
Division of Neuroscience, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta T6G 2S2, Canada
Hase, K. and
R. B. Stein.
Turning Strategies During Human Walking. J. Neurophysiol. 81: 2914-2922, 1999.
Turning strategies during human walking. The mechanisms
involved in rapidly turning during human walking were studied. Subjects were asked to walk at a comfortable speed and to turn toward the instructed direction as soon as they felt an electrical stimulus to the
superficial peroneal nerve. Stimuli were presented repeatedly at random
over 10- to 15-min periods of walking for turning in both directions.
Electromyograms (EMGs), joint angular movements of the right leg, and
forces under both feet were recorded. The step cycle was divided into
16 parts, and the responses to stimuli in each part were analyzed
separately. Two turning strategies were used, depending on which leg
was placed in front for braking. For example, to turn to the right when
the right foot was placed in front, subjects generally altered
direction by spinning the body around the right foot (spin turn). To
turn left when the right foot was in front, subjects shifted weight to
the right leg, externally rotated the left hip, stepped onto the left
leg, and continued turning until the right leg stepped in the new
direction (step turn). The step turn is easy and stable because the
base of support during the turn is much wider than in the spin turn, so
some subjects used it in all parts of the cycle. Initially, the
deceleration of walking is similar to a rapid stopping task, which has
been previously examined. The deceleration mechanism involves a
sequence of distal-to-proximal activation of muscles on one side of the
body (soleus, biceps femoris, and erector spinae). This pattern is
similar to the "ankle strategy" used in postural control during
forward sway. The control of foot placement in the swing leg and muscle
activities for rotating the trunk in the stance leg occurred within a
step after the cue. The action of ankle inverters and elevation of the
pelvis by activity of gluteus medius may contribute to the control of
trunk rotation. This activity was closely related to the timing of the
opposite foot strike, independent of the part of the step cycle when
the stimulus was applied. In most subjects, the turn was completed without resetting the underlying walking rhythm. This first EMG analysis of rapid turning shows how common strategies for postural sway
and stopping can be combined with one of two turning strategies. This
simplifies the complex task of turning at a random time in the step cycle.
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