4.2 Article

Dynamic visual acuity during asymmetric walking

Journal

HUMAN MOVEMENT SCIENCE
Volume 85, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.humov.2022.102998

Keywords

Dynamic visual acuity; Head stability; Shock attenuation; Locomotor asymmetry; Locomotor adaptation

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This study investigates the impact of locomotor asymmetry on head stability and dynamic visual acuity. The results show that during adaptation, step length asymmetry increases, shock attenuation decreases, and head stability is reduced, with a slight decrease in dynamic visual acuity. However, these decrements are reduced in the later stage of the condition, highlighting the adaptive nature of locomotion and the visuomotor systems.
Necessary for effective ambulation, head stability affords optimal conditions for the perception of visual information during dynamic tasks. This maintenance of head-in-space equilibrium is achieved, in part, by the attenuation of the high frequency impact shock resulting from ground contact. While a great deal of experimentation has been done on the matter during steady state locomotion, little is known about how locomotor asymmetry might affect head stability or dy-namic visual acuity. In this study, fifteen participants walked on a split-belt treadmill while verbally reporting the orientation of a randomized Landolt-C optotype that was projected at heel strike. Participants were exposed to baseline, adaptation, and washout conditions, as character-ized by belt speed ratios of 1:1, 1:3, and 1:1, respectively. Step length asymmetry, shock atten-uation, high and low frequency head signal power, and dynamic visual acuity were averaged across the first and last fifty strides of each condition. Across the first fifty strides, step length asymmetry was significantly greater during adaptation than during baseline (p < 0.001; d = 2.442), and shock attenuation was significantly lower during adaptation than during baseline (p = 0.041; d = -0.679). High frequency head signal power was significantly greater during adaptation than during baseline (p < 0.001; d = -1.227), indicating a reduction in head stability. While dynamic visual acuity was not significantly lower during adaptation than during baseline (p = 0.052), a moderate effect size suggests a decrease in the measure between the two conditions (d = 0.653). Across the last fifty strides, many of the decrements observed between the baseline and adaptation conditions were greatly reduced. The results of this study indicate that the lo-comotor asymmetry imposed by the split-belt treadmill during early adaptation might lead to moderate decrements in shock attenuation, head stability, and dynamic visual acuity. Moreover, the relative reduction in magnitude of these decrements across the last fifty strides underscores the adaptive nature of the locomotor and visuomotor systems.

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