Biosignal processing methods to explore the effects of side-dominance on patterns of bi- and unilateral standing stability in healthy young adults

  • János Négyesi
  • , Bálint Petró
  • , Diane Nabil Salman
  • , Ahsan Khandoker
  • , Péter Katona
  • , Ziheng Wang
  • , Anfal Ibrahim Sanqour Qambar Almaazmi
  • , Tibor Hortobágyi
  • , Márk Váczi
  • , Kristóf Rácz
  • , Zsófia Pálya
  • , László Grand
  • , Rita M. Kiss
  • , Ryoichi Nagatomi

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

7 Scopus citations

Abstract

We examined the effects of side-dominance on the laterality of standing stability using ground reaction force, motion capture (MoCap), and EMG data in healthy young adults. We recruited participants with strong right (n = 15) and left (n = 9) hand and leg dominance (side-dominance). They stood on one or two legs on a pair of synchronized force platforms for 50 s with 60 s rest between three randomized stance trials. In addition to 23 CoP-related variables, we also computed six MoCap variables representing each lower-limb joint motion time series. Moreover, 39 time- and frequency-domain features of EMG data from five muscles in three muscle groups were analyzed. Data from the multitude of biosignals converged and revealed concordant patterns: no differences occurred between left- and right-side dominant participants in kinetic, kinematic, or EMG outcomes during bipedal stance. Regarding single leg stance, larger knee but lower ankle joint kinematic values appeared in left vs right-sided participants during non-dominant stance. Left-vs right-sided participants also had lower medial gastrocnemius EMG activation during non-dominant stance. While right-side dominant participants always produced larger values for kinematic data of ankle joint and medial gastrocnemius EMG activation during non-dominant vs dominant unilateral stance, this pattern was the opposite for left-sided participants, showing larger values when standing on their dominant vs non-dominant leg, i.e., participants had a more stable balance when standing on their right leg. Our results suggest that side-dominance affects biomechanical and neuromuscular control strategies during unilateral standing.

Original languageBritish English
Article number965702
JournalFrontiers in Physiology
Volume13
DOIs
StatePublished - 16 Sep 2022

Keywords

  • balance
  • hand dominance
  • laterality
  • leg-dominance
  • motion capture
  • posture

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