| Literature DB >> 30024895 |
Steven van Andel1, Michael H Cole1, Gert-Jan Pepping1.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The regulation of one's step length by placing one's foot at a specific position within gait, otherwise known as 'locomotor pointing', is well understood in walking and running gait. The current study was the first to broaden this understanding to a larger cohort and to describe the influence of age on the regulation of locomotor pointing when walking up to and stepping onto a curb-like platform.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30024895 PMCID: PMC6053146 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0200244
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Schematic of the experimental set up.
A) the 8.5-meter pressure-sensitive walkway, B) the moveable target, and C) the platform (15 cm high, 100 cm wide and 200 cm long) with the flick button at the end (at 1.35 m high).
Descriptive statistics (Mean ± SD) for the gait characteristics of participants split into age categories.
‘Standard’ Measures were Derived from the Middle of the Walks, ANOVAs with alpha set to 0.05 were used to Identify Significant Effects of Age Category on all Measures Except ‘Mean Age’.
| Measure | Young | Young-Old | Middle-Old | Old-Old |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| N = 17 | N = 33 | N = 35 | N = 29 | |
| Mean Age (years) | 25.35 (3.76) | 65.59 (2.19) | 70.97 (1.52) | 77.96 (3.21) |
| Standard Step Length (cm) | 75.07 (4.46) | 68.64 (8.56) | 68.60 (7.54) | 67.28 (7.88) |
| Maximal Comfortable Step Length (cm) | 84.48 (4.21) | 75.42 (8.69) | 75.10 (8.01) | 74.31 (9.14) |
| Standard Walking Speed (m/s) | 1.40 (0.14) | 1.31 (0.21) | 1.31 (0.14) | 1.29 (0.18) |
| Minimal SD-Footfall (cm) | 11.56 (2.37) | 7.00 (2.98) | 7.56 (3.23) | 7.32 (3.54) |
| OnsetReg in steps (step number) | 2.70 (0.28) | 2.95 (0.28) | 2.74 (0.33) | 2.95 (0.36) |
| OnsetReg in distance (cm) | 107.37 (19.59) | 107.16 (24.94) | 95.27 (18.58) | 103.56 (18.37 |
a ANOVA testing revealed no significant differences between groups.
b Bonferroni corrected post-hoc analysis revealed differences between the young group and three older groups, no differences between older groups were found
c Bonferroni corrected post-hoc analysis revealed the Young and Middle-Old groups to be significantly different from the Young-Old and Old-Old groups
d Maximal Comfortable Step Length represents the average over the 11th to the 20th biggest steps, representing a step length that was not on a participant’s absolute upper limit, but rather was a more functional representation of their maximum step.
Fig 2Descriptive analysis of locomotor pointing behavior.
Data depicted are split into age categories to make the effects of age more visually discernable; however it should be noted that, in the statistical analysis, age was included as a continuous variable. Panel A shows the standard deviation of footfall position (SD-footfall) as a function of the step number before stepping onto the curb. Panel B shows step length as a function of step number. And panel C shows the SD-footfall scaled by step length for each step number.
Fig 3Distribution of lengthening, shortening and mixed trials for the four different age groups.
Fig 4Strength of perceptual-motor coupling.
Figure indicating the relationship between Adjustrequired and Adjustproduced for foot placements leading up to the curb. Footfall-1 is the last foot placement before stepping up (step0). Data depicted are split into age categories to make the effects of age more visually discernable, however it should be noted that, in the statistical analysis, age was included as a continuous variable.
Summary of main results relating to the aging process.
| Analysis type—Dependent variable | Main results relating to the effects of age | |
|---|---|---|
| Onset of regulation | LME—OnsetReg | No effect of age was found |
| Perceptual-motor coupling | LME—Footfall SD / Step Length | Significant fixed effect for age indicated that older age was associated with lower scaled variability; |
| Significant random effect of age at footfalls 0, -1, -4, -5 and -6 indicated that the influence of ageing was most pronounced at the end of the approach (i.e. closer to the target) | ||
| LME—relationship between Adjustrequired and Adjustproduced | Significant fixed interaction effect for age and Adjustrequired indicated that older age was associated with a stronger relation between Adjustrequired and Adjustproduced; | |
| Significant random effects at footfalls -1, -2, -5 and -6 indicated that the effect of age on the relation between Adjustrequired and Adjustproduced was strengthened as participants got closer to the curb | ||
| Adjustment strategy | ANOVA—Number of trials using a strategy | Young group showed more lengthening walks, older groups showed more shortening trials; no differences between older groups. |
| LME—Step Length | Significant fixed effect for age indicated older age was associated with taking shorter steps; | |
| significant random effect at step0 showed that the final step became especially short with increased age | ||
| LME—relationship between Adjustrequired and Adjustproduced | Significant random effect of age at footfalls -1, -2, -5 and -6 indicated that participants took shorter steps towards the end of the walk if they were older |