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Side dominance and eye patches obscuring half of the visual field do not affect walking kinematics

  • János Négyesi
  • , Bálint Kovács
  • , Bálint Petró
  • , Diane Nabil Salman
  • , Ahsan Khandoker
  • , Péter Katona
  • , Mostafa Moussa
  • , Tibor Hortobágyi
  • , Kristóf Rácz
  • , Zsófia Pálya
  • , László Grand
  • , Rita Mária Kiss
  • , Ryoichi Nagatomi
  • Hungarian University of Sports Science
  • Ningbo University
  • Budapest University of Technology and Economics
  • University of Pécs
  • University Medical Center Groningen
  • Pázmány Péter Catholic University
  • WPI-AIMR, Tohoku University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

3 Scopus citations

Abstract

Vision plays a fundamental role in the control of human locomotion, including walking gait. Given that side-dominance is associated with differences in motor control, the present study aimed to determine if patches obscuring half of the visual field affect left- and right-side dominant individuals’ gait kinematics and accompanying leg muscle activation differently. Healthy right- (n = 15, age = 28.2 ± 5.5 years) and left-side (n = 9, age = 27.9 ± 5.8 years) dominant participants performed 10 min of walking trials on a treadmill at a self-selected speed with 5 min of rest between three randomized trials, i.e., wearing clear glasses or glasses with left-or right half-field eye patching. In addition to a set of spatiotemporal and kinematic gait parameters, the average activity during the separated gait cycle phases, and the start and end of muscle activation in % of the gait cycle were calculated from five muscles in three muscle groups. Our results indicate that gait kinematics of left- and right-side dominant participants were similar both in their dominant and non-dominant legs, regardless of half-field eye patching condition. On the other hand, inter-group differences were found in selected kinematic variables. For instance, in addition to larger but less variable step width, our results suggest larger ankle and knee ROM in right- vs. left-sided participants. Furthermore, medial gastrocnemius and biceps femoris muscle activation showed selected differences at certain phases of the gait cycle between participants’ dominant and non-dominant legs. However, it was also unaffected by the half-field eye patching condition. Moreover, the endpoint of medial gastrocnemius activation was affected by side-dominance, i.e., its activation ended earlier in the non-dominant leg of right- as compared to left-side dominant participants. Our results suggest no major differences in walking gait kinematics and accompanying muscle activation between half-field eye patching conditions in healthy adults; nevertheless, side-dominance may affect biomechanical and neuromuscular control strategies during walking gait.

Original languageBritish English
Article number6189
JournalScientific Reports
Volume15
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2025

Keywords

  • Electromyography
  • Gait
  • laterality
  • Motion capture
  • Vision

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