Effects of walking in a force field for varying durations on aftereffects and on next day performance.

Exp Brain Res

Center for Interdisciplinary Research in Rehabilitation and Social Integration (CIRRIS), Quebec Rehabilitation Institute, 525 Blvd. Wilfrid-Hamel, Room H-1320, Quebec, QC, G1M 2S8, Canada.

Published: November 2009

This study investigated the effects of walking in an elastic force field (FF) for varying durations (49-1,629 strides) on: (a) the magnitude and duration of aftereffects, (b) performance in the FF on the next day. On day 1 in the FF, subjects (n = 17) showed an initial large error in peak toe velocity during swing (9-61% above baseline) that was largely reduced within the first 40 strides. After FF removal, subjects (16/17) showed aftereffects: (1) reduction in toe velocity (9-38% below baseline), (2) increase in hamstrings muscle activation. While the magnitude of aftereffects did not correlate to FF exposure duration, aftereffects duration did (p < 0.05). During FF exposure on day 2, initial toe velocity error was smaller than on day 1 (13/17 subjects, p < 0.001) regardless of day 1 exposure duration. This was associated with an earlier effective onset in hamstring activation. These results suggest that during walking, even short daily exposures to a FF (> or =49 strides) lead to significant retention of the new movement parameters.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00221-009-1989-9DOI Listing

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