Evaluation of the Phase-Dependent Rhythm Control of Human Walking Using Phase Response Curves.

Humans and animals control their walking rhythms to maintain motion in a variable environment. The neural mechanism for controlling rhythm has been investigated in many studies using mechanical and electrical stimulation. However, quantitative evaluation of rhythm variation in response to perturbati...

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Main Authors: Tetsuro Funato, Yuki Yamamoto, Shinya Aoi, Takashi Imai, Toshio Aoyagi, Nozomi Tomita, Kazuo Tsuchiya
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016-05-01
Series:PLoS Computational Biology
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4874544?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-e6b2093add5c40edb69e0b8be0fb2dfb2020-11-25T01:44:39ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Computational Biology1553-734X1553-73582016-05-01125e100495010.1371/journal.pcbi.1004950Evaluation of the Phase-Dependent Rhythm Control of Human Walking Using Phase Response Curves.Tetsuro FunatoYuki YamamotoShinya AoiTakashi ImaiToshio AoyagiNozomi TomitaKazuo TsuchiyaHumans and animals control their walking rhythms to maintain motion in a variable environment. The neural mechanism for controlling rhythm has been investigated in many studies using mechanical and electrical stimulation. However, quantitative evaluation of rhythm variation in response to perturbation at various timings has rarely been investigated. Such a characteristic of rhythm is described by the phase response curve (PRC). Dynamical simulations of human skeletal models with changing walking rhythms (phase reset) described a relation between the effective phase reset on stability and PRC, and phase reset around touch-down was shown to improve stability. A PRC of human walking was estimated by pulling the swing leg, but such perturbations hardly influenced the stance leg, so the relation between the PRC and walking events was difficult to discuss. This research thus examines human response to variations in floor velocity. Such perturbation yields another problem, in that the swing leg is indirectly (and weakly) perturbed, so the precision of PRC decreases. To solve this problem, this research adopts the weighted spike-triggered average (WSTA) method. In the WSTA method, a sequential pulsed perturbation is used for stimulation. This is in contrast with the conventional impulse method, which applies an intermittent impulsive perturbation. The WSTA method can be used to analyze responses to a large number of perturbations for each sequence. In the experiment, perturbations are applied to walking subjects by rapidly accelerating and decelerating a treadmill belt, and measured data are analyzed by the WSTA and impulse methods. The PRC obtained by the WSTA method had clear and stable waveforms with a higher temporal resolution than those obtained by the impulse method. By investigation of the rhythm transition for each phase of walking using the obtained PRC, a rhythm change that extends the touch-down and mid-single support phases is found to occur.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4874544?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tetsuro Funato
Yuki Yamamoto
Shinya Aoi
Takashi Imai
Toshio Aoyagi
Nozomi Tomita
Kazuo Tsuchiya
spellingShingle Tetsuro Funato
Yuki Yamamoto
Shinya Aoi
Takashi Imai
Toshio Aoyagi
Nozomi Tomita
Kazuo Tsuchiya
Evaluation of the Phase-Dependent Rhythm Control of Human Walking Using Phase Response Curves.
PLoS Computational Biology
author_facet Tetsuro Funato
Yuki Yamamoto
Shinya Aoi
Takashi Imai
Toshio Aoyagi
Nozomi Tomita
Kazuo Tsuchiya
author_sort Tetsuro Funato
title Evaluation of the Phase-Dependent Rhythm Control of Human Walking Using Phase Response Curves.
title_short Evaluation of the Phase-Dependent Rhythm Control of Human Walking Using Phase Response Curves.
title_full Evaluation of the Phase-Dependent Rhythm Control of Human Walking Using Phase Response Curves.
title_fullStr Evaluation of the Phase-Dependent Rhythm Control of Human Walking Using Phase Response Curves.
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of the Phase-Dependent Rhythm Control of Human Walking Using Phase Response Curves.
title_sort evaluation of the phase-dependent rhythm control of human walking using phase response curves.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Computational Biology
issn 1553-734X
1553-7358
publishDate 2016-05-01
description Humans and animals control their walking rhythms to maintain motion in a variable environment. The neural mechanism for controlling rhythm has been investigated in many studies using mechanical and electrical stimulation. However, quantitative evaluation of rhythm variation in response to perturbation at various timings has rarely been investigated. Such a characteristic of rhythm is described by the phase response curve (PRC). Dynamical simulations of human skeletal models with changing walking rhythms (phase reset) described a relation between the effective phase reset on stability and PRC, and phase reset around touch-down was shown to improve stability. A PRC of human walking was estimated by pulling the swing leg, but such perturbations hardly influenced the stance leg, so the relation between the PRC and walking events was difficult to discuss. This research thus examines human response to variations in floor velocity. Such perturbation yields another problem, in that the swing leg is indirectly (and weakly) perturbed, so the precision of PRC decreases. To solve this problem, this research adopts the weighted spike-triggered average (WSTA) method. In the WSTA method, a sequential pulsed perturbation is used for stimulation. This is in contrast with the conventional impulse method, which applies an intermittent impulsive perturbation. The WSTA method can be used to analyze responses to a large number of perturbations for each sequence. In the experiment, perturbations are applied to walking subjects by rapidly accelerating and decelerating a treadmill belt, and measured data are analyzed by the WSTA and impulse methods. The PRC obtained by the WSTA method had clear and stable waveforms with a higher temporal resolution than those obtained by the impulse method. By investigation of the rhythm transition for each phase of walking using the obtained PRC, a rhythm change that extends the touch-down and mid-single support phases is found to occur.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4874544?pdf=render
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