4.4 Article

Developmental constraints of quadrupedal coordination across crawling styles in human infants

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
Volume 107, Issue 11, Pages 3050-3061

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/jn.00029.2012

Keywords

interlimb; intralimb; locomotion; gait; perturbation

Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research
  2. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  3. National Institute for Health Research, USA

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Patrick SK, Noah JA, Yang JF. Developmental constraints of quadrupedal coordination across crawling styles in human infants. J Neurophysiol 107: 3050-3061, 2012. First published March 7, 2012; doi:10.1152/jn.00029.2012.-Human infants can crawl using several very different styles; this diversity appears at first glance to contradict our previous findings from hands-and-knees crawling, which suggested that there were strict limitations on coordination, imposed either mechanically or by the developing nervous system. To determine whether coordination was similarly restricted across crawling styles, we studied free crawling overground in 22 infants who used a number of different locomotor strategies. Despite the wide variety in the use of individual limbs and even the number of limbs used, the duration of the stance phase increased with duration of cycle, whereas the duration of the swing phase remained more constant. Additionally, all infants showed organized, rhythmic interlimb coordination. Alternating patterns (e.g., trotlike) predominated (86% of infants). Alternatively, yet much less frequently, all limbs used could work in synchrony (14% of infants). Pacelike patterns were never observed, even in infants that crawled with the belly remaining in contact with the ground so that stability was not a factor. To explore the robustness of the interlimb coordination, a perturbation that prolonged swing of the leg was imposed on 14 additional infants crawling on hands and knees overground or on the treadmill. The perturbation led to a resetting of the crawling pattern, but never to a change in the coordination of the limbs. The findings concur with those regarding other infant animals, together suggesting that the nervous system itself limits the coordination patterns available at a young age.

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