Publications by authors named "G Pavei"

The metabolic cost of steady-state walking is well known; however, across legged animals, most walking bouts are too short to reach steady state. Here, we investigate how bout duration affects the metabolic cost of human walking with varying mechanical power, metabolic intensity and duration. Ten participants walked for 10- to 240-s bouts on a stair climber at 0.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Gait symmetry is one of the most informative aspects describing the quality of gait. Many indices have been proposed to quantify gait symmetry. Among them, indices focusing on the comparison of the two body sides (e.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In laboratory settings, human locomotion encounters minimal opposition from air resistance. However, moving in nature often requires overcoming airflow. Here, the drag force exerted on the body by different headwind or tailwind speeds (between 0 and 15 m·s) was measured during walking at 1.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Long-lasting exposure to low gravity, such as in lunar settlements planned by the ongoing Artemis Program, elicits muscle hypotrophy, bone demineralization, cardio-respiratory and neuro-control deconditioning, against which optimal countermeasures are still to be designed. Rather than training selected muscle groups only, 'whole-body' activities such as locomotion seem better candidates, but at Moon gravity both 'pendular' walking and bouncing gaits like running exhibit abnormal dynamics at faster speeds. We theoretically and experimentally show that much greater self-generated artificial gravities can be experienced on the Moon by running horizontally inside a static 4.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Compared to their closest ape relatives, humans walk bipedally with lower metabolic cost (C) and less mechanical work to move their body center of mass (external mechanical work, W). However, differences in W are not large enough to explain the observed lower C: humans may also do less work to move limbs relative to their body center of mass (internal kinetic mechanical work, W). From published data, we estimated differences in W, total mechanical work (W), and efficiency between humans and chimpanzees walking bipedally.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF