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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 85 No. 2 February 2001, pp. 559-570
Copyright ©2001 by the American Physiological Society
R. S. Dow Neurological Sciences Institute, Portland, Oregon 97209
Henry, Sharon M.,
Joyce Fung, and
Fay B. Horak.
Effect of Stance Width on Multidirectional Postural Responses. J. Neurophysiol. 85: 559-570, 2001. The effect of stance width on postural responses to 12 different
directions of surface translations was examined. Postural responses
were characterized by recording 11 lower limb and trunk muscles, body
kinematics, and forces exerted under each foot of 7 healthy subjects
while they were subjected to horizontal surface translations in 12 different, randomly presented directions. A quasi-static approach of
force analysis was done, examining force integrals in three different
epochs (background, passive, and active periods). The latency and
amplitude of muscle responses were quantified for each direction, and
muscle tuning curves were used to determine the spatial activation
patterns for each muscle. The results demonstrate that the horizontal
force constraint exerted at the ground was lessened in the wide,
compared with narrow, stance for humans, a similar finding to that
reported by Macpherson for cats. Despite more trunk
displacement in narrow stance, there were no significant changes in
body center of mass (CoM) displacement due to large changes in center
of pressure (CoP), especially in response to lateral translations.
Electromyographic (EMG) magnitude decreased for all directions in wide
stance, particularly for the more proximal muscles, whereas latencies
remained the same from narrow to wide stance. Equilibrium control in
narrow stance was more of an active postural strategy that included
regulating the loading/unloading of the limbs and the direction of
horizontal force vectors. In wide stance, equilibrium control relied
more on an increase in passive stiffness resulting from changes in limb
geometry. The selective latency modulation of the proximal muscles with
translation direction suggests that the trunk was being actively
controlled in all directions. The similar EMG latencies for both narrow
and wide stance, with modulation of only the muscle activation
magnitude as stance width changed, suggest that the same postural
synergy was only slightly modified for a change in stance width.
Nevertheless, the magnitude of the trunk displacement, as well as of
CoP displacement, was modified based on the degree of passive stiffness
in the musculoskeletal system, which increased with stance width. The
change from a more passive to an active horizontal force constraint, to
larger EMG magnitudes especially in the trunk muscles and larger trunk
and CoP excursions in narrow stance are consistent with a more
effortful response for equilibrium control in narrow stance to
perturbations in all directions.
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