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Assessment of Biomechanical Predictors of Occurrence of Low-Amplitude N1 Potentials Evoked by Naturally Occurring Postural Instabilities. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • - This study investigates how postural instabilities while standing and walking activate specific brain responses (N1 potentials) and explores a new framework to track biomechanical parameters that predict these responses.
  • - Through experiments involving healthy young adults, researchers used EEG to analyze brain activity alongside ground forces and head acceleration during balance tasks with altered body sway.
  • - The findings identify time to boundary (TTB) as the most effective predictor of N1 potentials, suggesting that monitoring the center of pressure (COP) could enhance early detection of balance issues and inform future technologies to help prevent falls, especially in older adults.

Article Abstract

Naturally occurring postural instabilities that occur while standing and walking elicit specific cortical responses in the fronto-central regions (N1 potentials) followed by corrective balance responses to prevent falling. However, no framework could simultaneously track different biomechanical parameters preceding N1s, predict N1s, and assess their predictive power. Here, we propose a framework and show its utility by examining cortical activity (through electroencephalography [EEG]), ground reaction forces, and head acceleration in the anterior-posterior (AP) direction. Ten healthy young adults carried out a balance task of standing on a support surface with or without sway referencing in the AP direction, amplifying, or dampening natural body sway. Using independent components from the fronto-central cortical region obtained from subject-specific head models, we first robustly validated a prior approach on identifying low-amplitude N1 potentials before early signs of balance corrections. Then, a machine learning algorithm was used to evaluate different biomechanical parameters obtained before N1 potentials, to predict the occurrence of N1s. When different biomechanical parameters were directly compared, the time to boundary (TTB) was found to be the best predictor of the occurrence of upcoming low-amplitude N1 potentials during a balance task. Based on these findings, we confirm that the spatio-temporal characteristics of the center of pressure (COP) might serve as an essential parameter that can facilitate the early detection of postural instability in a balance task. Extending our framework to identify such biomarkers in dynamic situations like walking might improve the implementation of corrective balance responses through brain-machine-interfaces to reduce falls in the elderly.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11047164PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TNSRE.2022.3154707DOI Listing

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