Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: http://hdl.handle.net/2067/50476
Titolo: Sex-specific tuning of modular muscle activation patterns for locomotion in young and older adults
Autori: Santuz, Alessandro
Janshen, Lars
Brüll, Leon
Munoz-Martel, Victor
Taborri, Juri 
Rossi, Stefano 
Arampatzis, Adamantios
Rivista: PLOS ONE 
Data pubblicazione: 2022
Abstract: 
There is increasing evidence that including sex as a biological variable is of crucial importance to promote rigorous, repeatable and reproducible science. In spite of this, the body of literature that accounts for the sex of participants in human locomotion studies is small and often produces controversial results. Here, we investigated the modular organization of muscle activation patterns for human locomotion using the concept of muscle synergies with a double purpose: i) uncover possible sex-specific characteristics of motor control and ii) assess whether these are maintained in older age. We recorded electromyographic activities from 13 ipsilateral muscles of the lower limb in young and older adults of both sexes walking (young and old) and running (young) on a treadmill. The data set obtained from the 215 participants was elaborated through non-negative matrix factorization to extract the time-independent (i.e., motor modules) and time-dependent (i.e., motor primitives) coefficients of muscle synergies. We found sparse sex-specific modulations of motor control. Motor modules showed a different contribution of hip extensors, knee extensors and foot dorsiflexors in various synergies. Motor primitives were wider (i.e., lasted longer) in males in the propulsion synergy for walking (but only in young and not in older adults) and in the weight acceptance synergy for running. Moreover, the complexity of motor primitives was similar in younger adults of both sexes, but lower in older females as compared to older males. In essence, our results revealed the existence of small but defined sex-specific differences in the way humans control locomotion and that these are not entirely maintained in older age.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2067/50476
ISSN: 1932-6203
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0269417
Diritti: Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
È visualizzato nelle collezioni:A1. Articolo in rivista

File in questo documento:
File Descrizione DimensioniFormato Existing users please
journal.pone.0269417.pdf3.15 MBAdobe PDF  Richiedi una copia
Visualizza tutti i metadati del documento

SCOPUSTM
Citations

12
Last Week
0
Last month
2
controllato il 14-mar-2025

Page view(s)

55
controllato il 19-mar-2025

Google ScholarTM

Check

Altmetric


Questo documento è distribuito in accordo con Licenza Creative Commons Creative Commons