Locomotion is incredibly flexible. Humans are able to stay upright and navigate long distances in the face of ever-changing environments and varied task demands, such as walking while carrying a heavy object or in thick mud. The focus of this review is a behavior that is critical for this flexibility: motor adaptation. Adaptation is defined here as the process of adjusting a movement to new demands through trial-and-error practice. A key feature of adaptation is that more practice without the new demand is required to return the movement to its original state. Thus, motor adaptation is a short-term motor learning process. Several studies have been undertaken to determine how humans adapt walking to novel circumstances. Many of these studies have examined locomotor adaptation using a split-belt treadmill. The results of these studies of people who were healthy and people with neurologic damage suggest that the cerebellum is required for normal adaptation of walking and that the role of cerebral structures may be less critical. They also suggest that intersegmental and interlimb coordination is critical but readily adaptable to accommodate changes in the environment. Locomotor adaptation also can be used to determine the walking potential of people with specific neurologic deficits. For instance, split-belt and limb-weighting locomotor adaptation studies show that adults with chronic stroke are capable of improving weight-bearing and spatiotemporal symmetry, at least temporarily. Our challenge as rehabilitation specialists is to intervene in ways that maximize this capacity.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2816031PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.2522/ptj.20090073DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

locomotor adaptation
16
adaptation
9
motor adaptation
8
neurophysiologic rehabilitation
4
rehabilitation insights
4
insights split-belt
4
locomotor
4
split-belt locomotor
4
adaptation paradigms
4
paradigms locomotion
4

Similar Publications

Robust undulatory locomotion through neuromechanical adjustments in a dissipative medium.

J R Soc Interface

January 2025

Nantes Université, École Centrale Nantes, IMT Atlantique, CNRS, LS2N, UMR 6004, Nantes F-44000, France.

Dissipative environments are ubiquitous in nature, from microscopic swimmers in low-Reynolds-number fluids to macroscopic animals in frictional media. In this study, we consider a mathematical model of a slender elastic locomotor with an internal rhythmic neural pattern generator to examine various undulatory locomotion such as swimming and crawling behaviours. By using local mechanical load as mechanosensory feedback, we have found that undulatory locomotion robustly emerges in different rheological media.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: The inheritance of the short allele, encoding the serotonin transporter (SERT) in humans, increases susceptibility to neuropsychiatric and metabolic disorders, with aging and female sex further exacerbating these conditions. Both central and peripheral mechanisms of the compromised serotonin (5-HT) system play crucial roles in this context. Previous studies on SERT-deficient (Sert) mice, which model human SERT deficiency, have demonstrated emotional and metabolic disturbances, exacerbated by exposure to a high-fat Western diet (WD).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Analyses of form-function relationships are widely used to understand links between morphology, ecology, and adaptation across macroevolutionary scales. However, few have investigated functional trade-offs and covariance within and between the skull, limbs, and vertebral column simultaneously. In this study, we investigated the adaptive landscape of skeletal form and function in carnivorans to test how functional trade-offs among these skeletal regions contribute to ecological adaptations and the topology of the landscape.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objective: Therapeutic translation is challenging in spinal cord injury (SCI) and large animal models with high clinical relevance may accelerate therapeutic development. Pigs have important anatomical and physiological similarities to humans. Intraspinal inflammation mediates SCI pathophysiology.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Robust yet Self-Healing Multimodal Actuators Enabled by Noncovalent Assembled Nanostructure.

Nano Lett

January 2025

Guangxi Key Laboratory of Calcium Carbonate Resources Comprehensive Utilization, College of Materials and Chemical Engineering, Hezhou University, Hezhou City 542899, China.

In nature, animals can realize multimodal movements such as walking, climbing, and jumping through transformation in locomotor gaits or form for survival, which is highly desired for untethered flexible actuators yet remains challenging. Here, we propose a robust self-healing multimodal actuator enabled by noncovalent assembled nanostructures with elaborate regulation of multistage responsive behaviors. Owing to the dynamic interfacial design between multiple components, the stimulus can be accurately delivered through a "light-heat-force release" pathway, endowing the actuator with diverse motion capabilities and desired jumping ability (27 cm, 34 times body length).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!