Title of article :
Proprioceptive contribution of postural control as assessed from very slow oscillations of the support in healthy humans
Author/Authors :
M. Vaugoyeau، نويسنده , , S. Viel، نويسنده , , B. Amblard، نويسنده , , J.P Azulay، نويسنده , , C. Assaiante، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages :
9
From page :
294
To page :
302
Abstract :
Maintaining erect human posture depends on graviceptive information. This can come from at least of three origins: vestibular, visual and somaesthetic. We hypothesize here that subjectʹs use proprioception rather than visual or vestibular cues for their control of upright body posture and this even when subjects stand on a tilting body support surface. In order to find experimental evidence for this hypothesis, we exclude in our experiments visual cues (eyes close) and by keeping frequency and amplitude of the tilt stimulus so low that it would be below the detection threshold for vestibular semi-circular canal stimuli. The orientations of body segments were analysed during various phases of the perturbation cycle. Segmental stabilisations were defined in terms of both the global anchoring index calculated during the whole perturbation cycle and an appropriate sequential anchoring index calculated during various phases in the perturbation cycle. We show that subjects tend to align their bodies with the space vertical and do so better for their heads than for their upper bodies and lower bodies. A further finding is that stabilisation is related to the tilt stimulus in the form that it is minimal at the turning points of the tilt, where peak tilt velocity is minimal with the sinusoidal stimulus used.
Keywords :
Segmental stabilisation , Proprioception , Semi-circular canals , Postural orientation , humans
Journal title :
Gait and Posture
Serial Year :
2008
Journal title :
Gait and Posture
Record number :
489078
Link To Document :
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