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Locomotor kinematics and EMG activity during quadrupedal versus bipedal gait in the Japanese macaque

Locomotor kinematics and EMG activity during quadrupedal versus bipedal gait in the Japanese macaque

Authors :
Kazunori Morita
Katsumi Nakajima
Yasuo Higurashi
Futoshi Mori
Akira Murata
Soichiro Fujiki
Marc A. Maier
Masahiko Inase
Shinya Aoi
Source :
Journal of Neurophysiology. 122:398-412
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
American Physiological Society, 2019.

Abstract

Several qualitative features distinguish bipedal from quadrupedal locomotion in mammals. In this study we show quantitative differences between quadrupedal and bipedal gait in the Japanese monkey in terms of gait patterns, trunk/hindlimb kinematics, and electromyographic (EMG) activity, obtained from 3 macaques during treadmill walking. We predicted that as a consequence of an almost upright body axis, bipedal gait would show properties consistent with temporal and spatial optimization countering higher trunk/hindlimb loads and a less stable center of mass (CoM). A comparatively larger step width, an ~9% longer duty cycle, and ~20% increased relative duration of the double-support phase were all in line with such a strategy. Bipedal joint kinematics showed the strongest differences in proximal, and least in distal, hindlimb joint excursions compared with quadrupedal gait. Hindlimb joint coordination (cyclograms) revealed more periods of single-joint rotations during bipedal gait and predominance of proximal joints during single support. The CoM described a symmetrical, quasi-sinusoidal left/right path during bipedal gait, with an alternating shift toward the weight-supporting limb during stance. Trunk/hindlimb EMG activity was nonuniformally increased during bipedal gait, most prominently in proximal antigravity muscles during stance (up to 10-fold). Non-antigravity hindlimb EMG showed altered temporal profiles during liftoff or touchdown. Muscle coactivation was more, but muscle synergies less, frequent during bipedal gait. Together, these results show that behavioral and EMG properties of bipedal vs. quadrupedal gait are quantitatively distinct and suggest that the neural control of bipedal primate locomotion underwent specific adaptations to generate these particular behavioral features to counteract increased load and instability. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Bipedal locomotion imposes particular biomechanical constraints on motor control. In a within-species comparative study, we investigated joint kinematics and electromyographic characteristics of bipedal vs. quadrupedal treadmill locomotion in Japanese macaques. Because these features represent (to a large extent) emergent properties of the underlying neural control, they provide a comparative, behavioral, and neurophysiological framework for understanding the neural system dedicated to bipedal locomotion in this nonhuman primate, which constitutes a critical animal model for human bipedalism.

Details

ISSN :
15221598 and 00223077
Volume :
122
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Neurophysiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f2f8b3b2c0ece0e0286f6f0d221a6df4
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1152/jn.00803.2018