Firing properties of single human motor units during locomotion.
- 1 January 1984
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in The Journal of Physiology
- Vol. 346 (1) , 195-202
- https://doi.org/10.1113/jphysiol.1984.sp015016
Abstract
The discharge properties of single motor units in the short extensors of the toes were studied during normal locomotion using electromyographic recordings which permitted the identification of single motor unit potentials. The single motor units were recruited in the same order during slowly increasing speed of locomotion as they were during slowly increasing voluntary tension, i.e. motor units with low axonal conduction velocity were recruited before motor units with higher conduction velocity. Low threshold units fired five to ten times at 80‐40 ms intervals in each step cycle during walking at normal speed. Motor units with moderately high thresholds fired once or only a small number of times in each cycle at shorter interspike intervals. High threshold motor units did not participate in the step cycle during walking at normal speeds but fired in short high‐frequency bursts in corrective movements.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- The fatigue of voluntary contraction and the peripheral electrical propagation of single motor units in manThe Journal of Physiology, 1983
- Axonal conduction velocity and voluntary discharge properties of individual short toe extensor motor units in man.The Journal of Physiology, 1978
- The rate of tension development in isometric tetanic contractions of mammalian fast and slow skeletal muscleThe Journal of Physiology, 1965