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  4. Planar covariance of upper and lower limb elevation angles during hand–foot crawling in healthy young adults
 
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Planar covariance of upper and lower limb elevation angles during hand–foot crawling in healthy young adults

Author(s)
M. J. MacLellan
G. Catavitello
Y. P. Ivanenko
ASI Sponsor
Subjects

Quadrupedal locomotio...

Neural control

Coordination

Date Issued
2017-08-01
Abstract
Habitual quadrupeds have been shown to display a planar covariance of segment elevation angle waveforms in the fore and hind limbs during many forms of locomotion. The purpose of the current study was to determine if humans generate similar patterns in the upper and lower limbs during hand–foot crawling. Nine healthy young adults performed hand–foot crawling on a treadmill at speeds of 1, 2, and 3 km/h. A principal component analysis (PCA) was applied to the segment elevation angle waveforms for the upper (upper arm, lower arm, and hand) and lower (thigh, shank, and foot) limbs separately. The planarity of the elevation angle waveforms was determined using the sum of the variance explained by the first two PCs and the orientation of the covariance plane was quantified using the direction cosines of the eigenvector orthogonal to the plane, projected upon each of the segmental semi-axes. Results showed that planarity of segment elevation angles was maintained in the upper and lower limbs (explained variance >97%), although a slight decrease was present in the upper limb when crawling at 3 km/h. The orientation of the covariance plane was highly limb-specific, consistent with animal studies and possibly related to the functional neural control differences between the upper and lower limbs. These results may suggest that the motor patterns stored in the central nervous system for quadrupedal locomotion may be retained through evolution and may still be exploited when humans perform such tasks.
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.13025/5140
Journal
Experimental Brain Research
Issue
11
Volume
235
Start Page
3287
Start Page
3294
DOI
10.1007/s00221-017-5060-y
5a3a322c6c5e1b5a034b8ae4
5a3a322c6c5e1b5a034b8ae4
URL
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs00221-017-5060-y
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