共查询到4条相似文献,搜索用时 0 毫秒
1.
Vuillerme N Chenu O Demongeot J Payan Y 《Experimental brain research. Experimentelle Hirnforschung. Expérimentation cérébrale》2007,179(3):409-414
The present paper introduces an original biofeedback system for improving human balance control, whose underlying principle
consists in providing additional sensory information related to foot sole pressure distribution to the user through a tongue-placed
tactile output device. To assess the effect of this biofeedback system on postural control during quiet standing, ten young
healthy adults were asked to stand as immobile as possible with their eyes closed in two conditions of No-biofeedback and
Biofeedback. Centre of foot pressure (CoP) displacements were recorded using a force platform. Results showed reduced CoP
displacements in the Biofeedback relative to the No-biofeedback condition. The present findings evidenced the ability of the
central nervous system to efficiently integrate an artificial plantar-based, tongue-placed tactile biofeedback for controlling
control posture during quiet standing. 相似文献
2.
How a plantar pressure-based,tongue-placed tactile biofeedback modifies postural control mechanisms during quiet standing 总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2
Vuillerme N Pinsault N Chenu O Boisgontier M Demongeot J Payan Y 《Experimental brain research. Experimentelle Hirnforschung. Expérimentation cérébrale》2007,181(4):547-554
The purpose of the present study was to determine the effects of a plantar pressure-based, tongue-placed tactile biofeedback
on postural control mechanisms during quiet standing. To this aim, 16 young healthy adults were asked to stand as immobile
as possible with their eyes closed in two conditions of No-biofeedback and Biofeedback. Centre of foot pressure (CoP) displacements,
recorded using a force platform, were used to compute the horizontal displacements of the vertical projection of the centre
of gravity (CoG
v
) and those of the difference between the CoP and the vertical projection of the CoG (CoP-CoG
v
). Analysis of the CoP-CoG
v
displacements showed larger root mean square (RMS) and mean power frequencies (MPF) in the Biofeedback than in the No-biofeedback
condition. Stabilogram-diffusion analysis further showed a concomitant increased spatial and reduced temporal transition point
co-ordinates at which the corrective processes were initiated and an increased persistent behaviour of the CoP-CoG
v
displacements over the short-term region. Analysis of the CoG
v
displacements showed decreased RMS and increased MPF in the Biofeedback relative to the No-biofeedback condition. Stabilogram-diffusion
analysis further indicated that these effects mainly stem from reduced spatio-temporal transition point co-ordinates at which
the corrective process involving CoG
v
displacements is initiated and an increased anti-persistent behaviour of the CoG
v
displacements over the long-term region. Altogether, the present findings suggest that the main way the plantar pressure-based,
tongue-placed tactile biofeedback improves postural control during quiet standing is via both a reduction of the correction
thresholds and an increased efficiency of the corrective mechanism involving the CoG
v
displacements. 相似文献
3.
Nicolas Vuillerme Nicolas Pinsault Olivier Chenu Jacques Demongeot Yohan Payan Yuri Danilov 《Neuroscience letters》2008
The present study aimed at investigating the effects of an artificial head position-based tongue-placed electrotactile biofeedback on postural control during quiet standing under different somatosensory conditions from the support surface. Eight young healthy adults were asked to stand as immobile as possible with their eyes closed on two Firm and Foam support surface conditions executed in two conditions of No-biofeedback and Biofeedback. In the Foam condition, a 6-cm thick foam support surface was placed under the subjects’ feet to alter the quality and/or quantity of somatosensory information at the plantar sole and the ankle. The underlying principle of the biofeedback consisted of providing supplementary information about the head orientation with respect to gravitational vertical through electrical stimulation of the tongue. Centre of foot pressure (CoP) displacements were recorded using a force platform. Larger CoP displacements were observed in the Foam than Firm conditions in the two conditions of No-biofeedback and Biofeedback. Interestingly, this destabilizing effect was less accentuated in the Biofeedback than No-biofeedback condition. In accordance with the sensory re-weighting hypothesis for balance control, the present findings evidence that the availability of the central nervous system to integrate an artificial head orientation information delivered through electrical stimulation of the tongue to limit the postural perturbation induced by alteration of somatosensory input from the support surface. 相似文献
4.
Dozza M Horak FB Chiari L 《Experimental brain research. Experimentelle Hirnforschung. Expérimentation cérébrale》2007,178(1):37-48
The importance of sensory feedback for postural control in stance is evident from the balance improvements occurring when
sensory information from the vestibular, somatosensory, and visual systems is available. However, the extent to which also
audio-biofeedback (ABF) information can improve balance has not been determined. It is also unknown why additional artificial
sensory feedback is more effective for some subjects than others and in some environmental contexts than others. The aim of
this study was to determine the relative effectiveness of an ABF system to reduce postural sway in stance in healthy control
subjects and in subjects with bilateral vestibular loss, under conditions of reduced vestibular, visual, and somatosensory
inputs. This ABF system used a threshold region and non-linear scaling parameters customized for each individual, to provide
subjects with pitch and volume coding of their body sway. ABF had the largest effect on reducing the body sway of the subjects
with bilateral vestibular loss when the environment provided limited visual and somatosensory information; it had the smallest
effect on reducing the sway of subjects with bilateral vestibular loss, when the environment provided full somatosensory information.
The extent that all subjects substituted ABF information for their loss of sensory information was related to the extent that
each subject was visually dependent or somatosensory-dependent for their postural control. Comparison of postural sway under
a variety of sensory conditions suggests that patients with profound bilateral loss of vestibular function show larger than
normal information redundancy among the remaining senses and ABF of trunk sway. The results support the hypothesis that the
nervous system uses augmented sensory information differently depending both on the environment and on individual proclivities
to rely on vestibular, somatosensory or visual information to control sway. 相似文献