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Persistence of Motor-Equivalent Postural Fluctuations during Bipedal Quiet Standing

Theoretical and empirical work indicates that the central nervous system is able to stabilize motor performance by selectively suppressing task-relevant variability (TRV), while allowing task-equivalent variability (TEV) to occur. During unperturbed bipedal standing, it has previously been observed...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Verrel, Julius, Pradon, Didier, Vuillerme, Nicolas
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3482199/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23110228
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0048312
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author Verrel, Julius
Pradon, Didier
Vuillerme, Nicolas
author_facet Verrel, Julius
Pradon, Didier
Vuillerme, Nicolas
author_sort Verrel, Julius
collection PubMed
description Theoretical and empirical work indicates that the central nervous system is able to stabilize motor performance by selectively suppressing task-relevant variability (TRV), while allowing task-equivalent variability (TEV) to occur. During unperturbed bipedal standing, it has previously been observed that, for task variables such as the whole-body center of mass (CoM), TEV exceeds TRV in amplitude. However, selective control (and correction) of TRV should also lead to different temporal characteristics, with TEV exhibiting higher temporal persistence compared to TRV. The present study was specifically designed to test this prediction. Kinematics of prolonged quiet standing (5 minutes) was measured in fourteen healthy young participants, with eyes closed. Using the uncontrolled manifold analysis, postural variability in six sagittal joint angles was decomposed into TEV and TRV with respect to four task variables: (1) center of mass (CoM) position, (2) head position, (3) trunk orientation and (4) head orientation. Persistence of fluctuations within the two variability components was quantified by the time-lagged auto-correlation, with eight time lags between 1 and 128 seconds. The pattern of results differed between task variables. For three of the four task variables (CoM position, head position, trunk orientation), TEV significantly exceeded TRV over the entire 300 s-period.The autocorrelation analysis confirmed our main hypothesis for CoM position and head position: at intermediate and longer time delays, TEV exhibited higher persistence than TRV. Trunk orientation showed a similar trend, while head orientation did not show a systematic difference between TEV and TRV persistence. The combination of temporal and task-equivalent analyses in the present study allow a refined characterization of the dynamic control processes underlying the stabilization of upright standing. The results confirm the prediction, derived from computational motor control, that task-equivalent fluctuations for specific task variables show higher temporal persistence compared to task-relevant fluctuations.
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spelling pubmed-34821992012-10-29 Persistence of Motor-Equivalent Postural Fluctuations during Bipedal Quiet Standing Verrel, Julius Pradon, Didier Vuillerme, Nicolas PLoS One Research Article Theoretical and empirical work indicates that the central nervous system is able to stabilize motor performance by selectively suppressing task-relevant variability (TRV), while allowing task-equivalent variability (TEV) to occur. During unperturbed bipedal standing, it has previously been observed that, for task variables such as the whole-body center of mass (CoM), TEV exceeds TRV in amplitude. However, selective control (and correction) of TRV should also lead to different temporal characteristics, with TEV exhibiting higher temporal persistence compared to TRV. The present study was specifically designed to test this prediction. Kinematics of prolonged quiet standing (5 minutes) was measured in fourteen healthy young participants, with eyes closed. Using the uncontrolled manifold analysis, postural variability in six sagittal joint angles was decomposed into TEV and TRV with respect to four task variables: (1) center of mass (CoM) position, (2) head position, (3) trunk orientation and (4) head orientation. Persistence of fluctuations within the two variability components was quantified by the time-lagged auto-correlation, with eight time lags between 1 and 128 seconds. The pattern of results differed between task variables. For three of the four task variables (CoM position, head position, trunk orientation), TEV significantly exceeded TRV over the entire 300 s-period.The autocorrelation analysis confirmed our main hypothesis for CoM position and head position: at intermediate and longer time delays, TEV exhibited higher persistence than TRV. Trunk orientation showed a similar trend, while head orientation did not show a systematic difference between TEV and TRV persistence. The combination of temporal and task-equivalent analyses in the present study allow a refined characterization of the dynamic control processes underlying the stabilization of upright standing. The results confirm the prediction, derived from computational motor control, that task-equivalent fluctuations for specific task variables show higher temporal persistence compared to task-relevant fluctuations. Public Library of Science 2012-10-26 /pmc/articles/PMC3482199/ /pubmed/23110228 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0048312 Text en © 2012 Verrel 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
Verrel, Julius
Pradon, Didier
Vuillerme, Nicolas
Persistence of Motor-Equivalent Postural Fluctuations during Bipedal Quiet Standing
title Persistence of Motor-Equivalent Postural Fluctuations during Bipedal Quiet Standing
title_full Persistence of Motor-Equivalent Postural Fluctuations during Bipedal Quiet Standing
title_fullStr Persistence of Motor-Equivalent Postural Fluctuations during Bipedal Quiet Standing
title_full_unstemmed Persistence of Motor-Equivalent Postural Fluctuations during Bipedal Quiet Standing
title_short Persistence of Motor-Equivalent Postural Fluctuations during Bipedal Quiet Standing
title_sort persistence of motor-equivalent postural fluctuations during bipedal quiet standing
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3482199/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23110228
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0048312
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