Abstract

The current study investigated the rhythmic coordination between vocalization and whole-body movement. Previous studies have reported that spatiotemporal stability in rhythmic movement increases when coordinated with a rhythmic auditory stimulus or other effector in a stable coordination pattern. Therefore, the present study conducted two experiments to investigate (1) whether there is a stable coordination pattern between vocalization and whole-body movement and (2) whether a stable coordination pattern reduces variability in whole-body movement and vocalization. In Experiment 1, two coordination patterns between vocalizations and whole-body movement (hip, knee, and ankle joint flexion-on-the-voice vs. joint extension-on-the-voice) in a standing posture were explored at movement frequencies of 80, 130, and 180 beats per minute. At higher movement frequencies, the phase angle in the extension-on-the-voice condition deviated from the intended phase angle. However, the angle of the flexion-on-the-voice was maintained even when movement frequency increased. These results suggest that there was a stable coordination pattern in the flexion-on-the-voice condition. In Experiment 2, variability in whole-body movement and voice-onset intervals was compared between two conditions: one related to tasks performed in the flexion-on-the-voice coordination (coordination condition) that was a stable coordination pattern, and the other related to tasks performed independently (control condition). The results showed that variability in whole-body movement and voice-onset intervals was smaller in the coordination condition than in the control condition. Overall, the present study revealed mutual stabilization between rhythmic vocalization and whole-body movement via coordination within a stable pattern, suggesting that coupled action systems can act as a single functional unit or coordinative structure.

Highlights

  • Rhythmic auditory stimulation (RAS) is expected to be a means for enhancing performance in practical settings, gait rehabilitation and sports

  • Rhythmic acoustic stimuli generated by external devices are more stable than human movement so that movement stabilization occurs when accompanied with external acoustic stimuli, such as metronome beats

  • This indicates that the flexion-on-the-beat is a stable coordination pattern. This phenomenon have been observed during interlimb [25,26,27] and intra-limb coordination [28, 29]. These findings suggest that rhythmic movement coordination is governed by general dynamical principles

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Summary

Introduction

Rhythmic auditory stimulation (RAS) is expected to be a means for enhancing performance in practical settings, gait rehabilitation and sports. With respect to gait rehabilitation, extensive clinical studies have shown that RAS improves several aspects of gait timing among patients with Parkinson’s disease, such as gait tempo, stride length, and the magnitude of stride-time variability [1,2,3,4,5,6]. These facilitating effects of RAS on gait performance have been reported in patients with hemiparetic stroke [7] and traumatic brain injury [4]. Rhythmic acoustic stimuli generated by external devices are more stable than human movement so that movement stabilization occurs when accompanied with external acoustic stimuli, such as metronome beats

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