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  5. Robot-Driven Locomotor Perturbations Reveal Synergy- Mediated, Context-Dependent Feedforward and Feedback Mechanisms of Adaptation
 
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Robot-Driven Locomotor Perturbations Reveal Synergy- Mediated, Context-Dependent Feedforward and Feedback Mechanisms of Adaptation

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Author(s)
Severini, Giacomo 
Koenig, Alexander 
Adans-Dester, Catherine 
et al. 
Uri
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/12005
Date Issued
25 March 2020
Date Available
04T16:20:01Z March 2021
Abstract
Humans respond to mechanical perturbations that affect their gait by changing their motor control strategy. Previous work indicates that adaptation during gait is context dependent, and perturbations altering long-term stability are compensated for even at the cost of higher energy expenditure. However, it is unclear if gait adaptation is driven by unilateral or bilateral mechanisms, and what the roles of feedback and feedforward control are in the generation of compensatory responses. Here, we used a robot-based adaptation paradigm to investigate if feedback/feedforward and unilateral/bilateral contributions to locomotor adaptation are also context dependent in healthy adults. A robot was used to induce two opposite unilateral mechanical perturbations affecting the step length over multiple gait cycles. Electromyographic signals were collected and analyzed to determine how muscle synergies change in response to perturbations. The results unraveled different unilateral modulation dynamics of the muscle-synergy activations during adaptation, characterized by the combination of a slow-progressive feedforward process and a fast-reactive feedback-driven process. The relative unilateral contributions of the two processes to motor-output adjustments, however, depended on which perturbation was delivered. Overall, these observations provide evidence that, in humans, both descending and afferent drives project onto the same spinal interneuronal networks that encode locomotor muscle synergies.
Sponsorship
Enterprise Ireland
European Commission Horizon 2020
Science Foundation Ireland
Other Sponsorship
Insight Research Centre
German Federal Ministry of Research and Education
Bavarian Ministry of Economic Affairs
European Space Agency
German Federal Ministry of Economic Affairs and Energy
National Institutes of Health (NIH)
Lemelson Foundation
Medtronic
Hong Kong Research Grants Council
Chinese University of Hong Kong
Guangdong Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine
Golden King
Shun Hing Institute of Advanced Engineering
American Heart Association
Department of Defense
Michael J Fox Foundation
National Science Foundation
Peabody Foundation
Barrett Technology
BioSensics
Veristride
Emerge Diagnostics
MC10
Mitsui Chemicals
Shimmer Research
SynPhNe
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Springer Nature
Journal
 Scientific Reports
Volume
10
Copyright (Published Version)
2020 the Authors
Keywords
  • Personal sensing

  • Biophysical models

  • Central patterns gene...

DOI
10.1038/s41598-020-61231-8
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ie/
Owning collection
Insight Research Collection
Scopus© citations
14
Acquisition Date
Mar 31, 2023
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