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No Difference in the Acute Effects of Randomization vs. Blocking of Units of Lower-Extremity Proprioceptive Training on Balance and Postural Control in Young Healthy Male Adults

Random practice is a form of differential learning and its favorable acute effects on motor performance are well described when visual tasks are practiced. However, no study to date has investigated the acute effects of differential learning using variable proprioceptive stimuli instead of the visua...

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Autores principales: Ivusza, Patrik, Hortobágyi, Tibor, Sebesi, Balázs, Gáspár, Balázs, Fésüs, Ádám, Varga, Mátyás, Malmos, Vanessza, Váczi, Márk
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9086394/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35557968
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2022.824651
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author Ivusza, Patrik
Hortobágyi, Tibor
Sebesi, Balázs
Gáspár, Balázs
Fésüs, Ádám
Varga, Mátyás
Malmos, Vanessza
Váczi, Márk
author_facet Ivusza, Patrik
Hortobágyi, Tibor
Sebesi, Balázs
Gáspár, Balázs
Fésüs, Ádám
Varga, Mátyás
Malmos, Vanessza
Váczi, Márk
author_sort Ivusza, Patrik
collection PubMed
description Random practice is a form of differential learning and its favorable acute effects on motor performance are well described when visual tasks are practiced. However, no study to date has investigated the acute effects of differential learning using variable proprioceptive stimuli instead of the visual cues. The aim of the present study was to compare the acute effects of randomized versus blocked lower-extremity proprioceptive training stimuli on balance and postural adjustments. In two conditions, healthy young males (n = 15, age = 23 years) performed 16 one-legged landings on a board tilted in four directions: 1) tilt direction unknown and randomized and 2) tilt direction known with order of presentation blocked. Multi-segmental angular sway while balancing on an unstable surface and postural responses to perturbation stimulus by surface tilts were measured before and 4 min after training. Overall frontal-plane postural sway on the unstable surface decreased (p < 0.05, η(2) = 0.022) in both conditions, while sagittal-plane postural sway remained unchanged. When the surface was toes-up tilted in the perturbation test, the sagittal-plane shank-thigh-pelvis alignment improved in both conditions (p < 0.05, η(2) = 0.017), but the direction of the segmental positioning was non-uniform across participants. We conclude that randomization vs. blocking of units of lower-extremity proprioceptive training did not affect balance and postural control in our cohort of healthy young adults but the improvements were test-specific.
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spelling pubmed-90863942022-05-11 No Difference in the Acute Effects of Randomization vs. Blocking of Units of Lower-Extremity Proprioceptive Training on Balance and Postural Control in Young Healthy Male Adults Ivusza, Patrik Hortobágyi, Tibor Sebesi, Balázs Gáspár, Balázs Fésüs, Ádám Varga, Mátyás Malmos, Vanessza Váczi, Márk Front Physiol Physiology Random practice is a form of differential learning and its favorable acute effects on motor performance are well described when visual tasks are practiced. However, no study to date has investigated the acute effects of differential learning using variable proprioceptive stimuli instead of the visual cues. The aim of the present study was to compare the acute effects of randomized versus blocked lower-extremity proprioceptive training stimuli on balance and postural adjustments. In two conditions, healthy young males (n = 15, age = 23 years) performed 16 one-legged landings on a board tilted in four directions: 1) tilt direction unknown and randomized and 2) tilt direction known with order of presentation blocked. Multi-segmental angular sway while balancing on an unstable surface and postural responses to perturbation stimulus by surface tilts were measured before and 4 min after training. Overall frontal-plane postural sway on the unstable surface decreased (p < 0.05, η(2) = 0.022) in both conditions, while sagittal-plane postural sway remained unchanged. When the surface was toes-up tilted in the perturbation test, the sagittal-plane shank-thigh-pelvis alignment improved in both conditions (p < 0.05, η(2) = 0.017), but the direction of the segmental positioning was non-uniform across participants. We conclude that randomization vs. blocking of units of lower-extremity proprioceptive training did not affect balance and postural control in our cohort of healthy young adults but the improvements were test-specific. Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-04-26 /pmc/articles/PMC9086394/ /pubmed/35557968 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2022.824651 Text en Copyright © 2022 Ivusza, Hortobágyi, Sebesi, Gáspár, Fésüs, Varga, Malmos and Váczi. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Physiology
Ivusza, Patrik
Hortobágyi, Tibor
Sebesi, Balázs
Gáspár, Balázs
Fésüs, Ádám
Varga, Mátyás
Malmos, Vanessza
Váczi, Márk
No Difference in the Acute Effects of Randomization vs. Blocking of Units of Lower-Extremity Proprioceptive Training on Balance and Postural Control in Young Healthy Male Adults
title No Difference in the Acute Effects of Randomization vs. Blocking of Units of Lower-Extremity Proprioceptive Training on Balance and Postural Control in Young Healthy Male Adults
title_full No Difference in the Acute Effects of Randomization vs. Blocking of Units of Lower-Extremity Proprioceptive Training on Balance and Postural Control in Young Healthy Male Adults
title_fullStr No Difference in the Acute Effects of Randomization vs. Blocking of Units of Lower-Extremity Proprioceptive Training on Balance and Postural Control in Young Healthy Male Adults
title_full_unstemmed No Difference in the Acute Effects of Randomization vs. Blocking of Units of Lower-Extremity Proprioceptive Training on Balance and Postural Control in Young Healthy Male Adults
title_short No Difference in the Acute Effects of Randomization vs. Blocking of Units of Lower-Extremity Proprioceptive Training on Balance and Postural Control in Young Healthy Male Adults
title_sort no difference in the acute effects of randomization vs. blocking of units of lower-extremity proprioceptive training on balance and postural control in young healthy male adults
topic Physiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9086394/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35557968
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2022.824651
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