Published December 23, 2020 | Version v1
Journal article Open

The execution of movement: a spinal affair

  • 1. Department of Neuroscience, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden

Description

In this tribute to Reggie Edgerton, I briefly review the spinal mechanisms that coordinate locomotion and the interaction between the different sensory mechanisms that help coordinate the locomotor movements and the central locomotor network. The step cycle has four distinct parts, the support phase, the lift off, the flexion phase, and, the most complex, the touch down, when the limb makes a smooth contact with ground again. Each of these phases is affected by different sensory mechanisms, which interact with the central network [central pattern generator (CPG)] generating the basic movements with its four components. Conversely, the CPG also gates the sensory reflex pathways, so that they are active only in a given phase of the step cycle, or even produces opposite effects in different parts of the step cycle. These different examples from mammals are most likely important also to consider for human locomotion and, in particular, in patients with spinal cord injury, partial or complete.

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Additional details

Funding

European Commission
HBP SGA3 – Human Brain Project Specific Grant Agreement 3 945539
European Commission
HBP SGA2 – Human Brain Project Specific Grant Agreement 2 785907
European Commission
HBP – The Human Brain Project 604102