A novel system for introducing precisely-controlled, unanticipated gait perturbations for the study of stumble recovery

Abstract Background The experimental study of stumble recovery is essential to better understanding the reflexive mechanisms that help prevent falls as well as the deficiencies in fall-prone populations. This study would benefit from a system that can introduce perturbations that: 1) are realistic (...

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Main Authors: Shane T. King, Maura E. Eveld, Andrés Martínez, Karl E. Zelik, Michael Goldfarb
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-06-01
Series:Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12984-019-0527-7
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spelling doaj-587c0bb5a2e04b84838b6e1d36696ea92020-11-25T02:40:37ZengBMCJournal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation1743-00032019-06-0116111710.1186/s12984-019-0527-7A novel system for introducing precisely-controlled, unanticipated gait perturbations for the study of stumble recoveryShane T. King0Maura E. Eveld1Andrés Martínez2Karl E. Zelik3Michael Goldfarb4Department of Mechanical Engineering, Vanderbilt UniversityDepartment of Mechanical Engineering, Vanderbilt UniversityDepartment of Mechanical Engineering, Vanderbilt UniversityDepartment of Mechanical Engineering, Vanderbilt UniversityDepartment of Mechanical Engineering, Vanderbilt UniversityAbstract Background The experimental study of stumble recovery is essential to better understanding the reflexive mechanisms that help prevent falls as well as the deficiencies in fall-prone populations. This study would benefit from a system that can introduce perturbations that: 1) are realistic (e.g., obstacle disrupting the foot in swing phase), 2) are unanticipated by subjects, 3) are controllable in their timing, and 4) allow for kinematic and kinetic evaluation. Methods A stumble perturbation system was designed that consists of an obstacle delivery apparatus that releases an obstacle onto a force-instrumented treadmill and a predictive targeting algorithm which controls the timing of the perturbation to the foot during swing phase. Seven healthy subjects were recruited to take part in an experimental protocol for system validation, which consisted of two sub-experiments. First, a perception experiment determined whether subjects could perceive the obstacle as it slid onto the treadmill belt. Second, a perturbation experiment assessed the timing accuracy of perturbations relative to a target percent swing input by the experimenter. Data from this experiment were then used to demonstrate that joint kinematics and kinetics could be computed before and after the perturbation. Results Out of 168 perception trials (24 per subject), not a single obstacle was perceived entering the treadmill by the subjects. Out of 196 perturbation trials, 190 trials successfully induced a stumble event, with a mean targeting accuracy, relative to the desired percent swing, of 25 ms (6.2% of swing phase). Joint kinematic and kinetic results were then computed for three common stumble recovery strategies and shown to be qualitatively consistent with results from prior stumble studies conducted overground. Conclusions The stumble perturbation system successfully introduced realistic obstacle perturbations that were unanticipated by subjects. The targeting accuracy substantially reduced mistrials (i.e., trials that did not elicit a stumble) compared to previous studies. This accuracy enables stumble recovery to be studied more systematically as a function of when the perturbation occurs during swing phase. Lastly, joint kinematic and kinetic estimates allow for a comprehensive analysis of stumble recovery biomechanics.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12984-019-0527-7FallingTripStumble ApparatusJoint KinematicsJoint Kinetics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Shane T. King
Maura E. Eveld
Andrés Martínez
Karl E. Zelik
Michael Goldfarb
spellingShingle Shane T. King
Maura E. Eveld
Andrés Martínez
Karl E. Zelik
Michael Goldfarb
A novel system for introducing precisely-controlled, unanticipated gait perturbations for the study of stumble recovery
Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation
Falling
Trip
Stumble Apparatus
Joint Kinematics
Joint Kinetics
author_facet Shane T. King
Maura E. Eveld
Andrés Martínez
Karl E. Zelik
Michael Goldfarb
author_sort Shane T. King
title A novel system for introducing precisely-controlled, unanticipated gait perturbations for the study of stumble recovery
title_short A novel system for introducing precisely-controlled, unanticipated gait perturbations for the study of stumble recovery
title_full A novel system for introducing precisely-controlled, unanticipated gait perturbations for the study of stumble recovery
title_fullStr A novel system for introducing precisely-controlled, unanticipated gait perturbations for the study of stumble recovery
title_full_unstemmed A novel system for introducing precisely-controlled, unanticipated gait perturbations for the study of stumble recovery
title_sort novel system for introducing precisely-controlled, unanticipated gait perturbations for the study of stumble recovery
publisher BMC
series Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation
issn 1743-0003
publishDate 2019-06-01
description Abstract Background The experimental study of stumble recovery is essential to better understanding the reflexive mechanisms that help prevent falls as well as the deficiencies in fall-prone populations. This study would benefit from a system that can introduce perturbations that: 1) are realistic (e.g., obstacle disrupting the foot in swing phase), 2) are unanticipated by subjects, 3) are controllable in their timing, and 4) allow for kinematic and kinetic evaluation. Methods A stumble perturbation system was designed that consists of an obstacle delivery apparatus that releases an obstacle onto a force-instrumented treadmill and a predictive targeting algorithm which controls the timing of the perturbation to the foot during swing phase. Seven healthy subjects were recruited to take part in an experimental protocol for system validation, which consisted of two sub-experiments. First, a perception experiment determined whether subjects could perceive the obstacle as it slid onto the treadmill belt. Second, a perturbation experiment assessed the timing accuracy of perturbations relative to a target percent swing input by the experimenter. Data from this experiment were then used to demonstrate that joint kinematics and kinetics could be computed before and after the perturbation. Results Out of 168 perception trials (24 per subject), not a single obstacle was perceived entering the treadmill by the subjects. Out of 196 perturbation trials, 190 trials successfully induced a stumble event, with a mean targeting accuracy, relative to the desired percent swing, of 25 ms (6.2% of swing phase). Joint kinematic and kinetic results were then computed for three common stumble recovery strategies and shown to be qualitatively consistent with results from prior stumble studies conducted overground. Conclusions The stumble perturbation system successfully introduced realistic obstacle perturbations that were unanticipated by subjects. The targeting accuracy substantially reduced mistrials (i.e., trials that did not elicit a stumble) compared to previous studies. This accuracy enables stumble recovery to be studied more systematically as a function of when the perturbation occurs during swing phase. Lastly, joint kinematic and kinetic estimates allow for a comprehensive analysis of stumble recovery biomechanics.
topic Falling
Trip
Stumble Apparatus
Joint Kinematics
Joint Kinetics
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12984-019-0527-7
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