間眅埶AV

media release

Study finds the brain searches for the best way to move the body

May 10, 2022

Research that examines how the body adapts to new movements is shedding new light on how the nervous system learns, and could help to inform a wide range of applications, from customized rehabilitation and athletic training to wearable systems for healthcare. The research is published this week in the journal 

How does our brain figure out how to best move our body? It turns out that this can be a challenging problem for the nervous system, considering we have hundreds of muscles that can be coordinated hundreds of times per secondwith more possible coordination patterns to choose from than moves on a chessboard, says study senior author and 間眅埶AV professor Max Donelan, director of 間眅埶AVs Locomotion Lab.

We often experience changes to our body and our environment. Perhaps you enjoy a long run on a Saturday morningyour muscles may fatigue as the length of the run increases. Perhaps you choose to run on the beach on vacationthe sand may be uneven and loose in comparison to the pavement on the sidewalk. While we might register that these changes have occurred, we might not appreciate how our body adapts to these changes.

Donelans team of neuroscientists that study motor learning collaborated with a Stanford University team of mechanical engineers that design human-robot systems. Together, they tracked the walking characteristics of study participants wearing exoskeletons.

Findings

Researchers found that the nervous system solves the problem of learning a new movement coordination pattern by first exploring and evaluating many different coordination patterns. This exploration was measured as a general increase in variability spanning the levels of the whole movement, joint, and muscle.

With experience, the nervous system adapts specific aspects of movement and simultaneously decreases variability along these aspects. The researchers also found that these adaptive changes improved movement overall, reducing the energy cost of walking by about 25 per cent.

We created new contexts using exoskeletons that act to assist walking, and then studied how people explore new movements and learn more optimal ones, says Sabrina Abram, the study lead author and former graduate student in the Locomotion Lab. Participants experienced walking in this context over six days, resulting in about 30 hours of lab time for each and an extraordinary amount of data collected by co-author Katherine Poggensee.

While the nervous system appears to benefit from first searching among many different coordination patterns, it also benefits from reducing this search space over time, Abram adds. This is because continuing to search among coordination patterns that already reduce energy can in turn increase energy, as well as add to the already challenging problem of figuring out the best way to move.

Applications

Understanding how the brain searches for and figures out how to best move the body is important for a runner navigating new terrain, as well as a patient recovering from spinal injury or stroke.

For example, knowing when the body has adapted to a new training regimen can help coaches identify at which point an athlete should transition to learning new skills. This can also be useful for designing wearable systemssuch as exoskeletons and prostheticsby facilitating learning, and then evaluating peoples optimal responses to a range of designs.

Notes Donelan: We would all like to move in the best way possible. For healthy people, it seems that, with the right circumstances, the brain can take care of this. For those recovering from an injury, we might learn about how to best rehabilitate this injury from a better understanding of how the nervous system learns to adapt.

AVAILABLE 間眅埶AV EXPERTS

MAX DONELAN, Professor and Chair, Department of Biomedical Physiology and Kinesiology, 間眅埶AV, Director of Locomotion Lab, Co-Director of WearTech Labs
mdonelan@sfu.ca

SABRINA ABRAM, Postdoctoral Fellow, Department of Psychology, University of California, Berkeley
sabram@sfu.ca 

CONTACT 

MELISSA SHAW, 間眅埶AV Communications & Marketing 
236.880.3297 | melissa_shaw@sfu.ca 

間眅埶AV 
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778.782.3210

ABOUT SIMON FRASER UNIVERSITY

As Canadas engaged university, 間眅埶AV works with communities, organizations and partners to create, share and embrace knowledge that improves life and generates real change. We deliver a world-class education with lifelong value that shapes change-makers, visionaries and problem-solvers. We connect research and innovation to entrepreneurship and industry to deliver sustainable, relevant solutions to todays problems. With campuses in British Columbias three largest citiesVancouver, Burnaby and Surrey間眅埶AV has eight faculties that deliver 193 undergraduate degree programs and 144 graduate degree programs to more than 37,000 students. The university now boasts more than 170,000 alumni residing in 145+ countries.

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