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Evidence of invariant lower-limb kinematics in anticipation of ground contact during drop-landing and drop-jumping

Article dans une revue avec comité de lecture
Auteur
BECHET, Romain
118112 Institut Pprime [UPR 3346] [PPrime [Poitiers]]
199401 Centre de recherches sur la cognition et l'apprentissage [UMR 7295] [CeRCA [Poitiers, Tours]]
TISSERAND, Romain
118112 Institut Pprime [UPR 3346] [PPrime [Poitiers]]
199401 Centre de recherches sur la cognition et l'apprentissage [UMR 7295] [CeRCA [Poitiers, Tours]]
FRADET, Laetitia
118112 Institut Pprime [UPR 3346] [PPrime [Poitiers]]
ccCOLLOUD, Floren
1001017 Institut de Biomécanique Humaine Georges Charpak [IBHGC]

URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10985/26222
DOI
10.1016/j.humov.2024.103297
Date
2024-10
Journal
Human Movement Science

Résumé

Gravity is a ubiquitous external force that must be considered when producing coordinated movements. Drop-landing is a popular task to study how humans cope with gravity, because anticipatory muscle activations can be released before the estimated ground contact. But the consequences of these anticipatory muscle activations have only been interpreted in terms of stiffening the lower-limbs in preparation for ground contact, without considering potential anticipatory kinematic consequences. The objective of this study is to quantify the kinematic consequences of anticipatory muscle activations in two different landing tasks, to clarify whether anticipatory muscle activations are adapted to cope with gravity, to the dynamic constraints of the movement to perform, or both. Twenty young athletes performed drop-landing and drop-jumping from a 35 cm elevated platform. Sagittal angles and angular velocities of the hip, knee,and ankle joints, and acceleration of the foot were computed, as well as the onset of joint flexions and onset of foot vertical acceleration change. We found the same pattern of anticipatory hip and knee flexion, both starting before ground contact in all participants and in both tasks. We found no anticipatory kinematics for the ankle joint. Consecutive to the hip and knee flexion, the foot accelerated upwards before ground contact. Our results show that anticipatory muscle activations used by humans have systematic and invariant kinematic consequences during the air-time phase to cope with gravity: they initiate the hip and knee joints flexion before ground contact. This strategy likely limits the amount of ground reaction forces developed to oppose the gravity external force, and completes the stiffening role already described in the literature. These two complementary consequences —rotation and stiffening— seem to serve the same purpose of protecting the skeletal system. Since gravity is ubiquitous, these automated movements must be considered in other movements involving landing phases, such as heel strikes during gait.

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Evidence of invariant lower-limb ...
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2025-04-10
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Documents liés

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  • Anticipatory muscle activations to coordinate balance and movement during motor transitions: A narrative review 
    Article dans une revue avec comité de lecture
    ccBECHET, Romain; TISSERAND, Romain; FRADET, Laetitia; COLLOUD, Floren (Elsevier BV, 2025-02-11)
    Background: Maintaining balance while moving isvital forday-to-day activities. Akeychallenge inthe comprehension ofhuman movement istodetermine howmuscles contribute tobalance-movement coordination. Motor transitions, ...
  • A comparison of anticipatory processes between gait and step initiation: The role of the final state 
    Article dans une revue avec comité de lecture
    ccBECHET, Romain; TISSERAND, Romain; FRADET, Laetitia; ccCOLLOUD, Floren (Elsevier BV, 2025-03)
    Background Whole-body movement initiation with change of base of support is a common paradigm used to assess balance-movement coordination. During clinical evaluation, two transitions are commonly used: gait or step ...
  • Muscle‑Tendon Unit Length Measurement Using 3D Ultrasound in Passive Conditions: OpenSim Validation and Development of Personalized Models 
    Article dans une revue avec comité de lecture
    ccGUENANTEN, Hugo; RETAILLEAU, Maëva; DOREL, Sylvain; ccSARCHER, Aurélie; COLLOUD, Floren; ccNORDEZ, Antoine (Springer Nature, 2024-01)
    This study investigated the validity of using OpenSim to measure muscle-tendon unit (MTU) length of the bi-articular lower limb muscles in several postures (shortened, lengthened, a combination of shortened and lengthened ...
  • Earthen construction: an increase of the mechanical strength by optimizing the dispersion of the binder phase 
    Article dans une revue avec comité de lecture
    MOEVUS, Mariette; JORAND, Yves; OLAGNON, Christian; MAXIMILIEN, Sandrine; ANGER, Romain; FONTAINE, Laetitia; ARNAUD, Laurent (Springer Verlag, 2015)
    Although of interest for its low embodied energy content for construction, earth is usually not used for modern construction due to the expensive, artisanal and complicated process and the high variability of the raw ...
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    DIRANY, Mohammed; DIES, Laëtitia; RESTAGNO, Frédéric; LÉGER, Liliane; POULARD, Christophe; MIQUELARD-GARNIER, Guillaume (Elsevier, 2015)
    The influence of both viscoelastic and interfacial parameters on the surface properties of elastomers is difficult to study. Here, we describe a simple route to achieve surface modification of PDMS without impacting the ...

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