Variation in Foot Strike Patterns during Running among Habitually Barefoot Populations
Open Access
- 9 January 2013
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Public Library of Science (PLoS) in PLOS ONE
- Vol. 8 (1) , e52548
- https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0052548
Abstract
Endurance running may have a long evolutionary history in the hominin clade but it was not until very recently that humans ran wearing shoes. Research on modern habitually unshod runners has suggested that they utilize a different biomechanical strategy than runners who wear shoes, namely that barefoot runners typically use a forefoot strike in order to avoid generating the high impact forces that would be experienced if they were to strike the ground with their heels first. This finding suggests that our habitually unshod ancestors may have run in a similar way. However, this research was conducted on a single population and we know little about variation in running form among habitually barefoot people, including the effects of running speed, which has been shown to affect strike patterns in shod runners. Here, we present the results of our investigation into the selection of running foot strike patterns among another modern habitually unshod group, the Daasanach of northern Kenya. Data were collected from 38 consenting adults as they ran along a trackway with a plantar pressure pad placed midway along its length. Subjects ran at self-selected endurance running and sprinting speeds. Our data support the hypothesis that a forefoot strike reduces the magnitude of impact loading, but the majority of subjects instead used a rearfoot strike at endurance running speeds. Their percentages of midfoot and forefoot strikes increased significantly with speed. These results indicate that not all habitually barefoot people prefer running with a forefoot strike, and suggest that other factors such as running speed, training level, substrate mechanical properties, running distance, and running frequency, influence the selection of foot strike patterns.Keywords
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Foot strike patterns and collision forces in habitually barefoot versus shod runnersNature, 2010
- The effects of habitual footwear use: foot shape and function in native barefoot walkers†Footwear Science, 2009
- Last Interglacial Hominid and Associated Vertebrate Fossil Trackways in Coastal Eolianites, South AfricaIchnos, 2008
- The evolution of endurance running and the tyranny of ethnography: A reply to Pickering and Bunn (2007)Journal of Human Evolution, 2007
- Endurance running and the evolution of HomoNature, 2004
- 7500 Years of Prehistoric Footwear from Arnold Research Cave, MissouriScience, 1998
- Relative foot size and shape to general body size in Javanese, Filipinas and Japanese with special reference to habitual footwear typesAnnals of Human Biology, 1997
- Relationship between vertical ground reaction force and speed during walking, slow jogging, and runningClinical Biomechanics, 1996
- The influence of running velocity and midsole hardness on external impact forces in heel-toe runningJournal of Biomechanics, 1987
- A dynamic similarity hypothesis for the gaits of quadrupedal mammalsJournal of Zoology, 1983