How humans use visual optic flow to regulate stepping during walking

被引:26
|
作者
Salinas, Mandy M. [1 ]
Wilken, Jason M. [2 ]
Dingwell, Jonathan B. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Texas Austin, Dept Kinesiol & Hlth Educ, 2109 San Jacinto Blvd,Stop D3700, Austin, TX 78712 USA
[2] Brooke Army Med Ctr, Ctr Intrepid, JBSA Ft Sam Houston, Ft Sam Houston, TX USA
关键词
Gait; Human locomotion; Stepping control; Optic flow; LONG-RANGE CORRELATIONS; HUMAN GAIT; HUMAN LOCOMOTION; KINEMATICS; DYNAMICS; VISION; ADULTS;
D O I
10.1016/j.gaitpost.2017.05.002
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Humans use visual optic flow to regulate average walking speed. Among many possible strategies available, healthy humans walking on motorized treadmills allow fluctuations in stride length (L-n) and stride time (TT) to persist across multiple consecutive strides, but rapidly correct deviations in stride speed (S-n, = L-n/T-n) at each successive stride, n. Several experiments verified this stepping strategy when participants walked with no optic flow. This study determined how removing or systematically altering optic flow influenced peoples' stride-to stride stepping control strategies. Participants walked on a treadmill with a virtual reality (VR) scene projected onto a 3 m tall, 180 degrees semi-cylindrical screen in front of the treadmill. Five conditions were tested: blank screen ("BLANK"), static scene ("STATIC"), or moving scene with optic flow speed slower than ("SLOW"), matched to ("MATCH"), or faster than ("FAST") walking speed. Participants took shorter and faster strides and demonstrated increased stepping variability during the BLANK condition compared to the other conditions. Thus, when visual information was removed, individuals appeared to walk more cautiously. Optic flow influenced both how quickly humans corrected stride speed deviations and how successful they were at enacting this strategy to try to maintain approximately constant speed at each stride. These results were consistent with Weber's law: healthy adults more-rapidly corrected stride speed deviations in a no optic flow condition (the lower intensity stimuli) compared to contexts with non-zero optic flow. These results demonstrate how the temporal characteristics of optic flow influence ability to correct speed fluctuations during walking.
引用
收藏
页码:15 / 20
页数:6
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