Human bipedal gait is inherently unstable, and staying upright requires adaptive control of dynamic balance. Little is known about adaptive control of dynamic balance in reaction to long-term, continuous perturbations. We examined how dynamic balance control adapts to a continuous perturbation in gait, by letting people walk faster with one leg than the other on a treadmill with two belts (i.e. split-belt walking). In addition, we assessed whether changes in mediolateral dynamic balance control coincide with changes in energy use during split-belt adaptation. In 9 min of split-belt gait, mediolateral margins of stability and mediolateral foot roll-off changed during adaptation to the imposed gait asymmetry, especially on the fast side, and ...
Split-belt locomotion (i.e., walking with unequal leg speeds) requires a rapid adaptation of biomech...
MSPO Capstone research presented at the 3rd Annual Prosthetic Orthotic Research Symposium, April 19,...
BACKGROUND AND AIM: Walking on a split-belt treadmill (each of the two belts running at different sp...
Human bipedal gait is inherently unstable, and staying upright requires adaptive control of dynamic ...
Human bipedal gait requires active control of mediolateral dynamic balance to stay upright. The marg...
The adaptability of human bipedal locomotion has been studied using split-belt treadmill walking. Mo...
Introduction The ability to adapt dynamic balance to perturbations during gait deteriorates with age...
Walking is the most important means of transport for humans. Only when our walking ability decreases...
Gait asymmetry resulting from neurological injury is more costly and less stable than healthy gait. ...
Split-belt treadmill walking allows researchers to understand how new gait patterns are acquired. In...
Reactive locomotor adaptations are crucial for safe mobility, but remain relatively unexplored. Here...
Humans have the great ability to adapt their walking to different situations imposing distinct motor...
Abstract The split-belt treadmill has been used to examine the adaptation of spatial and temporal ga...
Split-belt locomotion (i.e., walking with unequal leg speeds) requires a rapid adaptation of biomech...
MSPO Capstone research presented at the 3rd Annual Prosthetic Orthotic Research Symposium, April 19,...
BACKGROUND AND AIM: Walking on a split-belt treadmill (each of the two belts running at different sp...
Human bipedal gait is inherently unstable, and staying upright requires adaptive control of dynamic ...
Human bipedal gait requires active control of mediolateral dynamic balance to stay upright. The marg...
The adaptability of human bipedal locomotion has been studied using split-belt treadmill walking. Mo...
Introduction The ability to adapt dynamic balance to perturbations during gait deteriorates with age...
Walking is the most important means of transport for humans. Only when our walking ability decreases...
Gait asymmetry resulting from neurological injury is more costly and less stable than healthy gait. ...
Split-belt treadmill walking allows researchers to understand how new gait patterns are acquired. In...
Reactive locomotor adaptations are crucial for safe mobility, but remain relatively unexplored. Here...
Humans have the great ability to adapt their walking to different situations imposing distinct motor...
Abstract The split-belt treadmill has been used to examine the adaptation of spatial and temporal ga...
Split-belt locomotion (i.e., walking with unequal leg speeds) requires a rapid adaptation of biomech...
MSPO Capstone research presented at the 3rd Annual Prosthetic Orthotic Research Symposium, April 19,...
BACKGROUND AND AIM: Walking on a split-belt treadmill (each of the two belts running at different sp...