These findings demonstrate that BDW induces asymmetric adjustments in muscle activation patterns. Rhythm generation (timing) did not significantly differ between BDW and FW. However, we did observe changes in pattern formation (i.e., EMG profiles) during FW pre- and post-BDW training. Burst-to-cycle duration ratios, as a measure of rhythm generation, showed changes during early adaptation, particularly the increase in right SOL and right TA during block 1, though these changes did not reach statistical significance and largely returned to baseline during washout. The underlying pattern formation structure, was maintained across all conditions, with selective amplitude modulations rather than fundamental reorganization of activation patterns. The substantial temporal adjustments in the backward-moving leg's SOL and phase shifts in TA provide the neuromuscular mechanism driving the bilateral step-length reduction, altered inter-limb phasing, and asymmetric double stance timing. These results extend our understanding of locomotor control by suggesting how the central nervous system (CNS) dynamically recalibrates muscle timing and amplitude to maintain satisfactory locomotion under new environmental demands.
Mojtabavi et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
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