Neck muscle vibration makes walking humans accelerate in the direction of gaze
Open Access
- 1 June 2000
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in The Journal of Physiology
- Vol. 525 (3) , 803-814
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1469-7793.2000.t01-1-00803.x
Abstract
1 We studied the effect of the continuous vibration of symmetrical dorsal neck muscles in seven normal subjects during (a) quiet standing, (b) stepping in place movements and (c) walking on the treadmill. The experiments were performed in a darkened room and the subjects were given the instruction not to resist the applied perturbation. In one condition the velocity of the treadmill was controlled by feedback from the subject's current position. Head, trunk and leg motion were recorded at 100 Hz. 2 In normal standing, neck vibration elicited a prominent forward body sway. During stepping in place, neck vibration produced an involuntary forward stepping at about 0.3 m s−1 without modifying the stepping frequency. If the head was turned horizontally 45 and 90 deg to the right or to the left, neck muscle vibration caused stepping approximately in the direction of the head naso-occipital axis. For lateral eye deviations, the direction of stepping was roughly aligned with gaze direction. 3 In treadmill locomotion, neck vibration produced an involuntary step-like increase of walking speed (by 0.1–0.6 m s−1), independent of the initial walking speed. During backward locomotion, the walking speed tended to decrease during neck vibration. 4 Thus, continuous neck vibration evokes changes in the postural reference during quiet standing and in the walking speed during locomotion. The results suggest that the proprioceptive input from the neck is integrated in the control of human posture and locomotion and is processed in the context of a viewer-centred reference frame.Keywords
This publication has 53 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effect of gaze on postural responses to neck proprioceptive and vestibular stimulation in humansThe Journal of Physiology, 1999
- Effects of galvanic vestibular stimulation during human walkingThe Journal of Physiology, 1999
- Perceptual distortions of the human body image produced by local anaesthesia, pain and cutaneous stimulationThe Journal of Physiology, 1999
- Visuomotor regulation of locomotionCanadian Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology, 1996
- Postural responses to vibrostimulation of the neck muscle proprioceptors in manNeurophysiology, 1994
- Movement, posture and equilibrium: Interaction and coordinationProgress in Neurobiology, 1992
- NECK MUSCLE VIBRATION MODIFIES THE REPRESENTATION OF VISUAL MOTION AND DIRECTION IN MANBrain, 1988
- Postural effects of neck muscle vibration in manCellular and Molecular Life Sciences, 1980
- THE CONTRIBUTION OF MUSCLE AFFERENTS TO KESLESTHESIA SHOWN BY VIBRATION INDUCED ILLUSIONSOF MOVEMENT AND BY THE EFFECTS OF PARALYSING JOINT AFFERENTSBrain, 1972
- Normal variability of tonic vibration reflexes in manExperimental Neurology, 1966