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Journal Article

Citation

Law JCL, Wong TWL, Chan DCL, Lam WK. Percept. Mot. Skills 2018; 125(4): 682-695.

Affiliation

Department of Kinesiology, Shenyang Sport University, Shenyang, China.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/0031512518783456

PMID

29929435

Abstract

Visual illusions caused by varied orientations of visual patterns may influence the perception of space and size, possibly affecting body stability during locomotion. This study examined the effect of variations in shoe top visual patterns on perception and biomechanical stability while walking and running. Twenty healthy adults performed five walking and running trials along an instrumented walkway when wearing shoes with five different striped patterns (plain, vertical, outward, horizontal, and inward). Before these locomotion trials, participants ranked their perceptions of shoe width. We used synchronized force platform and motion capturing systems to measure ground reaction force, mediolateral center of position displacement, ankle inversion and eversion, ankle excursion, and maximum eversion velocity. We rated stability perception on a 150-mm visual analog scale immediately after each shoe condition. Data analyses indicated that participants perceived plain and horizontal striped shoes as significantly wider than inward and vertical patterned shoes. During walking, participants wearing shoes with plain and horizontal striped patterns demonstrated smaller mediolateral center of position displacement, maximum eversion velocity, and ankle range of motion when compared with walking when wearing outward and vertical striped patterns; when running, we observed a similar effect for maximum eversion velocity. Thus, certain visual patterns on the tops of shoes influence the wearers' width perception and locomotion in ways that affect ankle stability during walking and running, with implications for risk of injury.


Language: en

Keywords

balance; footwear; gait; illusion; safe-stepping strategy

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