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Journal Article

Citation

Müller R, Rode C, Aminiaghdam S, Vielemeyer J, Blickhan R. Proc. Math. Phys. Eng. Sci. 2017; 473(2207): e20170404.

Affiliation

Motionscience, Institute of Sport Sciences, Friedrich Schiller University Jena, Seidelstraße 20, 07740 Jena, Germany.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, The Royal Society)

DOI

10.1098/rspa.2017.0404

PMID

29225495

PMCID

PMC5719626

Abstract

Directing the ground reaction forces to a focal point above the centre of mass of the whole body promotes whole body stability in human and animal gaits similar to a physical pendulum. Here we show that this is the case in human hip-flexed walking as well. For all upper body orientations (upright, 25°, 50°, maximum), the focal point was well above the centre of mass of the whole body, suggesting its general relevance for walking. Deviations of the forces' lines of action from the focal point increased with upper body inclination from 25 to 43 mm root mean square deviation (RMSD). With respect to the upper body in upright gait, the resulting force also passed near a focal point (17 mm RMSD between the net forces' lines of action and focal point), but this point was 18 cm below its centre of mass. While this behaviour mimics an unstable inverted pendulum, it leads to resulting torques of alternating sign in accordance with periodic upper body motion and probably provides for low metabolic cost of upright gait by keeping hip torques small. Stabilization of the upper body is a consequence of other mechanisms, e.g. hip reflexes or muscle preflexes.


Language: en

Keywords

bipedal walking; stability; upper body; virtual pivot point

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