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Gait coordination in overground walking with a virtual reality avatar

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posted on 2021-03-16, 13:51 authored by Artur A Soczawa-Stronczyk, Mateusz Bocian
Little information is currently available on interpersonal gait synchronization in overground walking. This is caused by difficulties in continuous gait monitoring over many steps while ensuring repeatability of experimental conditions. These challenges could be overcome by using immersive virtual reality (VR), assuming it offers ecological validity. To this end, this study provides some of the first evidence of gait coordination patterns for overground walking dyads in VR. Six subjects covered the total distance of 27 km while walking with a pacer. The pacer was either a real human subject or their anatomically and biomechanically representative VR avatar driven by an artificial intelligence algorithm. Side-by-side and front-to-back arrangements were tested without and with the instruction to synchronize steps. Little evidence of spontaneous gait coordination was found in both visual conditions, but persistent gait coordination patterns were found in the case of intentional synchronization. Front-to-back rather than side-by-side arrangement consistently yielded in the latter case higher mean synchronization strength index. Although the mean magnitude of synchronization strength index was overall comparable in both visual conditions when walking under the instruction to synchronize steps, quantitative and qualitative differences were found which might be associated with common limitations of VR solutions.

History

Author affiliation

School of Engineering

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Royal Society Open Science

Volume

7

Issue

7

Pagination

200622

Publisher

The Royal Society

issn

2054-5703

eissn

2054-5703

Acceptance date

2020-06-19

Copyright date

2020

Available date

2020-07-15

Language

en

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