Merging of Healthy Motor Modules Predicts Reduced Locomotor Performance and Muscle Coordination Complexity Post-Stroke
University of Florida · Malcom Randall VA Medical Center · +4 more institutions
Abstract
Evidence suggests that the nervous system controls motor tasks using a low-dimensional modular organization of muscle activation. However, it is not clear if such an organization applies to coordination of human walking, nor how nervous system injury may alter the organization of motor modules and their biomechanical outputs. We first tested the hypothesis that muscle activation patterns during walking are produced through the variable activation of a small set of motor modules. In 20 healthy control subjects, EMG signals from eight leg muscles were measured across a range of walking speeds. Four motor modules identified through nonnegative matrix factorization were sufficient to account for variability of…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 10.56
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 68
Authors
5- DJDavid J. Clark
University of Florida, Malcom Randall VA Medical Center
- LHLena H. Ting
Georgia Institute of Technology, The Wallace H. Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering
- FEFelix E. Zajac
Stanford University
- RRRichard R. Neptune
The University of Texas at Austin
- SASteven A. KautzCorresponding
University of Florida, Malcom Randall VA Medical Center
Topics & keywords
- Motor coordination
- Neuroscience
- Physical medicine and rehabilitation
- Stroke (engine)
- Psychology
- Computer science
- Medicine
- Physics
- Good health and well-being