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  4. Neck Muscle Vibration and Spatial Orientation During Stepping in Place in Humans
 
research article

Neck Muscle Vibration and Spatial Orientation During Stepping in Place in Humans

Bove, Marco
•
Courtine, Gregoire
•
Schieppati, Marco
2002
Journal of Neurophysiology

Unilateral long-lasting vibration was applied to the sternomastoid muscle to assess the influence of asymmetric neck proprioceptive input on body orientation during stepping-in-place. Blindfolded subjects performed 3 sequences of 3 trials, each lasting 60 s: control, vibration applied during stepping (VDS), and vibration applied before stepping (VBS). VDS caused clear-cut whole body rotation toward the side opposite to vibration. The body rotated around a vertical axis placed at about arm's length from the body. The rotation did not begin immediately on switching on the vibrator. The delay varied from subject to subject from a few seconds to about 10 s. Once initiated, the angular velocity of rotation was remarkably constant (about 1°/s). In VBS, at the beginning of stepping, subjects rotated for a while as if their neck were still vibrated. At a variable delay, the direction of rotation reversed, and the effects were opposite to those observed during VDS. Under no condition did head rotation, head roll, or lateral body tilt accompany rotation. The results confirm and extend the notion that the neck proprioceptive input plays a major role in body orientation during locomotion. The body rotation does not seem to depend on the same mechanisms that modify the erect posture; rather, the asymmetric neck input would seem to modify the egocentric body-centered coordinate system

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1152/jn.00198.2002
Author(s)
Bove, Marco
Courtine, Gregoire
Schieppati, Marco
Date Issued

2002

Published in
Journal of Neurophysiology
Volume

88

Issue

5

Start page

2232

End page

2241

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

OTHER

EPFL units
UPCOURTINE  
Available on Infoscience
October 29, 2018
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/149508
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