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Gait Transitions in Human Infants: Coping with Extremes of Treadmill Speed
Authors:Erin V. Vasudevan  Susan K. Patrick  Jaynie F. Yang
Affiliation:1. Rehabilitation Research and Movement Performance (RRAMP) Lab, Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, School of Health Technology and Management, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, New York, United States of America;2. Department of Physical Therapy, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada;3. Neuroscience and Mental Health Institute, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada;Scientific Institute Foundation Santa Lucia, ITALY
Abstract:Spinal pattern generators in quadrupedal animals can coordinate different forms of locomotion, like trotting or galloping, by altering coordination between the limbs (interlimb coordination). In the human system, infants have been used to study the subcortical control of gait, since the cerebral cortex and corticospinal tract are immature early in life. Like other animals, human infants can modify interlimb coordination to jump or step. Do human infants possess functional neuronal circuitry necessary to modify coordination within a limb (intralimb coordination) in order to generate distinct forms of alternating bipedal gait, such as walking and running? We monitored twenty-eight infants (7–12 months) stepping on a treadmill at speeds ranging between 0.06–2.36 m/s, and seventeen adults (22–47 years) walking or running at speeds spanning the walk-to-run transition. Six of the adults were tested with body weight support to mimic the conditions of infant stepping. We found that infants could accommodate a wide range of speeds by altering stride length and frequency, similar to adults. Moreover, as the treadmill speed increased, we observed periods of flight during which neither foot was in ground contact in infants and in adults. However, while adults modified other aspects of intralimb coordination and the mechanics of progression to transition to a running gait, infants did not make comparable changes. The lack of evidence for distinct walking and running patterns in infants suggests that the expression of different functional, alternating gait patterns in humans may require neuromuscular maturation and a period of learning post-independent walking.
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