Does increased gait variability improve stability when faced with an expected balance perturbation during treadmill walking?

Gait Posture

University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada; KITE-Toronto Rehabilitation Institute, University Health Network, Toronto, ON, Canada; Evaluative Clinical Sciences, Hurvitz Brain Sciences Program, Sunnybrook Research Institute, Toronto, ON, Canada. Electronic address:

Published: May 2021

Background: Currently, there is uncertainty as to whether movement variability is errorful or exploratory.

Research Question: This study aimed to determine if gait variability represents exploration to improve stability. We hypothesized that 1) spatiotemporal gait features will be more variable prior to an expected perturbation than during unperturbed walking, and 2) increased spatiotemporal gait variability pre-perturbation will correlate with improved stability post-perturbation.

Methods: Sixteen healthy young adults completed 15 treadmill walking trials within a motion simulator under two conditions: unperturbed and expecting a perturbation. Participants were instructed not to expect a perturbation for unperturbed trials, and to expect a single transient medio-lateral balance perturbation for perturbed trials. Kinematic data were collected during the trials. Twenty steps were recorded post-perturbation. Unperturbed and pre-perturbation gait variabilities were defined by the short- and long-term variabilities of step length, width, and time, using 100 steps from pre-perturbation and unperturbed trials. Paired t-tests identified between-condition differences in variabilities. Stability was defined as the number of steps to centre of mass restabilization post-perturbation. Multiple regression analyses determined the effect of pre-perturbation variability on stability.

Results: Long-term step width variability was significantly higher pre-perturbation compared to unperturbed walking (mean difference = 0.28 cm, p = 0.0073), with no significant differences between conditions for step length or time variabilities. There was no significant relationship between pre-perturbation variability and post-perturbation restabilization.

Significance: Increased pre-perturbation step width variability was neither beneficial nor detrimental to stability. However, the increased variability in medio-lateral foot placement suggests that participants adopted an exploratory strategy in anticipation of a perturbation.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.gaitpost.2021.03.014DOI Listing

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