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The Ramp protocol: Uncovering individual differences in walking to an auditory beat using TeensyStep.

Agnès Zagala1,2,3,4, Nicholas E V Foster5,6, Floris T van Vugt5,7,6,8

  • 1International Laboratory for Brain, Music and Sound Research (BRAMS), Montreal, Canada. agnes.zagala@umontreal.ca.

Scientific Reports
|October 10, 2024
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Most people easily sync walking to music, but individual differences exist. The new Ramp protocol and Response Score measure how well people adapt their gait to changing auditory rhythms.

Keywords:
Auditory-motor synchronizationGaitIndividual differencesRamp protocolTeensyStep

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Area of Science:

  • Biomechanics
  • Neuroscience
  • Human gait analysis

Background:

  • Synchronizing walking to auditory rhythms appears effortless but shows significant individual variability.
  • Existing methods lack a standardized approach to quantify spontaneous adaptation to changing rhythmic auditory stimuli during gait.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To introduce and validate the Ramp protocol for measuring spontaneous gait adaptation to tempo-changing auditory rhythms.
  • To develop and assess a novel quantification method, the Response Score, for characterizing individual differences in rhythmic entrainment.

Main Methods:

  • Development and validation of the TeensyStep device for real-time heel-strike detection and auditory stimulus synchronization.
  • Implementation of the Ramp protocol: participants walk at preferred cadence, followed by a metronome that progressively accelerates or decelerates.
  • Introduction of the Response Score to quantify individual adaptation profiles to the changing metronome tempo.

Main Results:

  • The TeensyStep device demonstrated reliable performance compared to a gold standard for step detection.
  • The Ramp protocol successfully captured individual differences in spontaneous gait adaptation to tempo changes.
  • The Response Score effectively distinguished varying adaptation patterns in response to rhythmic auditory stimuli.

Conclusions:

  • The Ramp protocol provides a sensitive method for assessing spontaneous gait synchronization to auditory rhythms.
  • The Response Score offers a valuable tool for quantifying and differentiating individual adaptation strategies in gait tasks.
  • This approach holds potential for clinical and research applications in understanding human motor control and rhythmic entrainment.