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Dissociated motor learning and de-adaptation in patients with functional gait disorders
- Source :
- Brain : a journal of neurology. 143(8)
- Publication Year :
- 2020
-
Abstract
- Walking onto a stationary platform that had been previously experienced as moving generates a locomotor after-effect—the so-called ‘broken escalator’ phenomenon. The motor responses that occur during locomotor after-effects have been mapped theoretically using a hierarchal Bayesian model of brain function that takes into account current sensory information that is weighted according to prior contextually-relevant experiences; these in turn inform automatic motor responses. Here, we use the broken escalator phenomenon to explore motor learning in patients with functional gait disorders and probe whether abnormal postural mechanisms override ascending sensory information and conscious intention, leading to maladaptive and disabling gait abnormalities. Fourteen patients with functional gait disorders and 17 healthy control subjects walked onto a stationary sled (‘Before’ condition, five trials), then onto a moving sled (‘Moving’ condition, 10 trials) and then again onto the stationary sled (‘After’ condition, five trials). Subjects were warned of the change in conditions. Kinematic gait measures (trunk displacement, step timing, gait velocity), EMG responses, and subjective measures of state anxiety/instability were recorded per trial. Patients had slower gait velocities in the Before trials (P
- Subjects :
- Adult
Male
medicine.medical_specialty
Movement disorders
Electromyography
Motor Activity
Gait (human)
Physical medicine and rehabilitation
Medicine
Humans
Learning
Somatoform Disorders
Gait
Gait Disorders, Neurologic
Aged
medicine.diagnostic_test
business.industry
Motor control
Broken escalator phenomenon
Middle Aged
medicine.disease
Trunk
Adaptation, Physiological
Preferred walking speed
Female
Neurology (clinical)
medicine.symptom
business
Motor learning
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 14602156
- Volume :
- 143
- Issue :
- 8
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Brain : a journal of neurology
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....78a11baed8b157c5ab3eadc43bf000dc