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Balancing with Vibration: A Prelude for “Drift and Act” Balance Control

Stick balancing at the fingertip is a powerful paradigm for the study of the control of human balance. Here we show that the mean stick balancing time is increased by about two-fold when a subject stands on a vibrating platform that produces vertical vibrations at the fingertip (0.001 m, 15–50 Hz)....

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Autores principales: Milton, John G., Ohira, Toru, Cabrera, Juan Luis, Fraiser, Ryan M., Gyorffy, Janelle B., Ruiz, Ferrin K., Strauss, Meredith A., Balch, Elizabeth C., Marin, Pedro J., Alexander, Jeffrey L.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2759542/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19841741
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0007427
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author Milton, John G.
Ohira, Toru
Cabrera, Juan Luis
Fraiser, Ryan M.
Gyorffy, Janelle B.
Ruiz, Ferrin K.
Strauss, Meredith A.
Balch, Elizabeth C.
Marin, Pedro J.
Alexander, Jeffrey L.
author_facet Milton, John G.
Ohira, Toru
Cabrera, Juan Luis
Fraiser, Ryan M.
Gyorffy, Janelle B.
Ruiz, Ferrin K.
Strauss, Meredith A.
Balch, Elizabeth C.
Marin, Pedro J.
Alexander, Jeffrey L.
author_sort Milton, John G.
collection PubMed
description Stick balancing at the fingertip is a powerful paradigm for the study of the control of human balance. Here we show that the mean stick balancing time is increased by about two-fold when a subject stands on a vibrating platform that produces vertical vibrations at the fingertip (0.001 m, 15–50 Hz). High speed motion capture measurements in three dimensions demonstrate that vibration does not shorten the neural latency for stick balancing or change the distribution of the changes in speed made by the fingertip during stick balancing, but does decrease the amplitude of the fluctuations in the relative positions of the fingertip and the tip of the stick in the horizontal plane, A(x,y). The findings are interpreted in terms of a time-delayed “drift and act” control mechanism in which controlling movements are made only when controlled variables exceed a threshold, i.e. the stick survival time measures the time to cross a threshold. The amplitude of the oscillations produced by this mechanism can be decreased by parametric excitation. It is shown that a plot of the logarithm of the vibration-induced increase in stick balancing skill, a measure of the mean first passage time, versus the standard deviation of the A(x,y) fluctuations, a measure of the distance to the threshold, is linear as expected for the times to cross a threshold in a stochastic dynamical system. These observations suggest that the balanced state represents a complex time–dependent state which is situated in a basin of attraction that is of the same order of size. The fact that vibration amplitude can benefit balance control raises the possibility of minimizing risk of falling through appropriate changes in the design of footwear and roughness of the walking surfaces.
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spelling pubmed-27595422009-10-20 Balancing with Vibration: A Prelude for “Drift and Act” Balance Control Milton, John G. Ohira, Toru Cabrera, Juan Luis Fraiser, Ryan M. Gyorffy, Janelle B. Ruiz, Ferrin K. Strauss, Meredith A. Balch, Elizabeth C. Marin, Pedro J. Alexander, Jeffrey L. PLoS One Research Article Stick balancing at the fingertip is a powerful paradigm for the study of the control of human balance. Here we show that the mean stick balancing time is increased by about two-fold when a subject stands on a vibrating platform that produces vertical vibrations at the fingertip (0.001 m, 15–50 Hz). High speed motion capture measurements in three dimensions demonstrate that vibration does not shorten the neural latency for stick balancing or change the distribution of the changes in speed made by the fingertip during stick balancing, but does decrease the amplitude of the fluctuations in the relative positions of the fingertip and the tip of the stick in the horizontal plane, A(x,y). The findings are interpreted in terms of a time-delayed “drift and act” control mechanism in which controlling movements are made only when controlled variables exceed a threshold, i.e. the stick survival time measures the time to cross a threshold. The amplitude of the oscillations produced by this mechanism can be decreased by parametric excitation. It is shown that a plot of the logarithm of the vibration-induced increase in stick balancing skill, a measure of the mean first passage time, versus the standard deviation of the A(x,y) fluctuations, a measure of the distance to the threshold, is linear as expected for the times to cross a threshold in a stochastic dynamical system. These observations suggest that the balanced state represents a complex time–dependent state which is situated in a basin of attraction that is of the same order of size. The fact that vibration amplitude can benefit balance control raises the possibility of minimizing risk of falling through appropriate changes in the design of footwear and roughness of the walking surfaces. Public Library of Science 2009-10-20 /pmc/articles/PMC2759542/ /pubmed/19841741 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0007427 Text en Milton et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Milton, John G.
Ohira, Toru
Cabrera, Juan Luis
Fraiser, Ryan M.
Gyorffy, Janelle B.
Ruiz, Ferrin K.
Strauss, Meredith A.
Balch, Elizabeth C.
Marin, Pedro J.
Alexander, Jeffrey L.
Balancing with Vibration: A Prelude for “Drift and Act” Balance Control
title Balancing with Vibration: A Prelude for “Drift and Act” Balance Control
title_full Balancing with Vibration: A Prelude for “Drift and Act” Balance Control
title_fullStr Balancing with Vibration: A Prelude for “Drift and Act” Balance Control
title_full_unstemmed Balancing with Vibration: A Prelude for “Drift and Act” Balance Control
title_short Balancing with Vibration: A Prelude for “Drift and Act” Balance Control
title_sort balancing with vibration: a prelude for “drift and act” balance control
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2759542/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19841741
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0007427
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