Perceiving inter-leg speed differences while walking on a split-belt treadmill

Abstract Walking is one of the most common forms of self-motion in humans. Most humans can walk effortlessly over flat uniform terrain, but also a variety of more challenging surfaces, as they adjust their gait to the demands of the terrain. In this, they rely in part on the perception of their own...

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Main Authors: Carl Müller, Karl Kopiske
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Portfolio 2025-01-01
Series:Scientific Reports
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-85091-8
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author Carl Müller
Karl Kopiske
author_facet Carl Müller
Karl Kopiske
author_sort Carl Müller
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Walking is one of the most common forms of self-motion in humans. Most humans can walk effortlessly over flat uniform terrain, but also a variety of more challenging surfaces, as they adjust their gait to the demands of the terrain. In this, they rely in part on the perception of their own gait and of when it needs to be adjusted. Here, we investigated how well N = 48 participants detected speed differences between two belts of a split-belt treadmill. As participants walked at a constant speed, we either accelerated or decelerated one of the belts at quasi-random intervals and asked participants to judge their relative speeds in a two-alternative forced-choice task. Using an adaptive psychophysical procedure, we obtained precise perception-threshold estimates for inter-leg speed differences after accelerating or decelerating one belt. We found that most participants could detect even very small speed differences, with mean threshold estimates of just over 7% for both perturbation types. These were relatively stable within, but highly variable across participants. Increased-speed and decreased-speed thresholds were highly correlated, indicating that despite different biomechanics, the detection mechanisms might be similar. This sheds light on how perceiving their own motion helps humans manage interlimb coordination in perturbed walking.
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spelling doaj-art-bc60c506761e41c5942084504d9acb6f2025-01-12T12:23:14ZengNature PortfolioScientific Reports2045-23222025-01-0115111010.1038/s41598-024-85091-8Perceiving inter-leg speed differences while walking on a split-belt treadmillCarl Müller0Karl Kopiske1Cognitive Systems Lab, Institute of Physics, Chemnitz University of TechnologyCognitive Systems Lab, Institute of Physics, Chemnitz University of TechnologyAbstract Walking is one of the most common forms of self-motion in humans. Most humans can walk effortlessly over flat uniform terrain, but also a variety of more challenging surfaces, as they adjust their gait to the demands of the terrain. In this, they rely in part on the perception of their own gait and of when it needs to be adjusted. Here, we investigated how well N = 48 participants detected speed differences between two belts of a split-belt treadmill. As participants walked at a constant speed, we either accelerated or decelerated one of the belts at quasi-random intervals and asked participants to judge their relative speeds in a two-alternative forced-choice task. Using an adaptive psychophysical procedure, we obtained precise perception-threshold estimates for inter-leg speed differences after accelerating or decelerating one belt. We found that most participants could detect even very small speed differences, with mean threshold estimates of just over 7% for both perturbation types. These were relatively stable within, but highly variable across participants. Increased-speed and decreased-speed thresholds were highly correlated, indicating that despite different biomechanics, the detection mechanisms might be similar. This sheds light on how perceiving their own motion helps humans manage interlimb coordination in perturbed walking.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-85091-8Self-motionPerception and actionJust-noticeable differencesWalkingSensorimotor adaptation
spellingShingle Carl Müller
Karl Kopiske
Perceiving inter-leg speed differences while walking on a split-belt treadmill
Scientific Reports
Self-motion
Perception and action
Just-noticeable differences
Walking
Sensorimotor adaptation
title Perceiving inter-leg speed differences while walking on a split-belt treadmill
title_full Perceiving inter-leg speed differences while walking on a split-belt treadmill
title_fullStr Perceiving inter-leg speed differences while walking on a split-belt treadmill
title_full_unstemmed Perceiving inter-leg speed differences while walking on a split-belt treadmill
title_short Perceiving inter-leg speed differences while walking on a split-belt treadmill
title_sort perceiving inter leg speed differences while walking on a split belt treadmill
topic Self-motion
Perception and action
Just-noticeable differences
Walking
Sensorimotor adaptation
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-85091-8
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