Keeping Balance with Vibrating Shoes 160
DrLudicrous writes "The NYTimes (free registration) is running an article that summerizes a forthcoming Physical Review Letters article. The article is about how low amplitude vibrations can help a person better sense when they are off balance. The authors write that they improved the balance of senior citizens by using small vibrations in the floor, making their sense of balance like that of a 25 year old. Apparently, this background noise helps to stimulate the neurons in the feet, making them more susceptible to detecting imbalances."
Conditioned response? (Score:4, Funny)
Comment removed (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Conditioned response? (Score:4, Funny)
Bass (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Bass (Score:5, Funny)
=Smidge=
Re:Bass (Score:2)
Re:Bass (Score:1)
Re:Bass (Score:2)
Re:Bass (Score:2)
Control of balance? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Control of balance? (Score:5, Informative)
Sensations from the feet are required to make sure they stay *under* you, thus helping to keep your head straight as well.
=Smidge=
Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Control of balance? (Score:1)
kinda like a hero
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
Go Stumbly! It's your birthday... (Score:2)
BTW: do you know how the Whirling Dervishes do their thing? they spin with their heads held still, cocked at what looks like a 45 degree angle, and turned into the spin. I know that ballet dancers hold their heads still, and then whip them around 180 degrees into a spin, which helps with orientation.
How does the Dervish method help, though? Does the inner-ear eventually ignore a constant acceleration? A friend thought that the angle would make the dancer feel like they were "rising" and help them with their balance. Looks pretty hard though.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Control of balance? (Score:2, Informative)
Vertigo, for anyone who has never had it, is usualy an inner ear problem, which can leave you off balance and dizzy for days on end. The dizzyness can range from a slight light headedness to virtual blindness (like when you stand up too fast, and you get dizzy and your sight goes black for a few seconds.). On many ocasions it has caused me to black out completely.
Thankfully this only happens 3 or 4 times a year, though it has lasted for more than 3 weeks once. My usual year involves two minor occurences (I can still function, but I try not to drive myself just to be safe), and one short, but intence occurence, (usualy so bad I can't stand to get out of bed) that lasts a day or so.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Control of balance? (Score:1)
Re:Control of balance? (Score:1)
Re:Control of balance? (Score:3, Interesting)
And that is how this works. On normal, solid and stable ground, the balance system "gets lazy", but by providing subtle shifts in the "ground", you force the balance system to so to speak, concentrate on what it is doing.
New Tech? (Score:4, Funny)
I must use this new technology to disrupt Spiderman's Spidey Sense! Bring out the Megalatrogolagolotron!!!
(mutters to self) It must be his weakness.
imagine (Score:1, Interesting)
Help me... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Help me... (Score:2)
I am here to protect you. Please go stand by the stairs. [jonathonrobinson.com]
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Balance (Score:1)
25 year old? (Score:3, Funny)
perhaps they should qualify that with a sober 25 year old...
Re:25 year old? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:25 year old? (Score:2)
Fuck it, gimme a beer.
Behind the scenes (Score:5, Funny)
Researcher 2: *silence*
Researcher 1: This has nothing to do with my blind-the-senior project for better visual acuity project!
Re:Behind the scenes (Score:4, Funny)
To see if we can the elderly sure footing?
Huh?
my blind-the-senior project for better visual acuity project!
Funded by the Department of Redundancy Department, no doubt?
Fix their vision too! (Score:5, Interesting)
So, while this vibrational shoe may have some balance effects, it's only part of the problem that they're fixing.
Re:Fix their vision too! (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Fix their vision too! (Score:2)
Re:Fix their vision too! (Score:1)
Re:Fix their vision too! (Score:2)
Terrific news (Score:3)
Now it's actually a Good Thing to crank the stereo at grandma's house. Of course, now that I think about it, it is grandma's house: the old Wallensack really can't get all that loud...
- DDT
I wonder if it helps healthy people. (Score:1)
I wonder if this technology could be applied to healthy individuals to allow higher than normal agility maybe for soldiers fighting in unstable enviroments where they may lose their footing.
One for the road... (Score:4, Funny)
X)
Think twice (Score:2, Funny)
These shoes... they vibrate? (Score:1)
Re:These shoes... they vibrate? (Score:2)
count me out! (Score:4, Funny)
It's Optional? (Score:4, Funny)
I didn't realize that growing old was optional! Cool!
So, where do I go to tell them "No"?
Re:It's Optional? (Score:1)
Re:It's Optional? (Score:1)
Re:It's Optional? (Score:2)
Well, you can always check out early...
side effects ? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:side effects ? (Score:2)
Re:side effects ? (Score:1)
Balance Vs. thresholds (Score:5, Interesting)
Seems it has to be random movement noise because any signal which is both repetitive and apparently irrelevant gets 'ignored' pretty quickly by the brain - after all, there's all kinds of signals coming through all the time like the feeling of your socks on your feet that you're not consciously aware of (though bet you are now, eh?).
Also, it's not really about balance (which, people are right, is sited in the middle ear primarily) and more to do with thresholds for detection - having random movement / vibration happening anyway means that the body swaying off-balance is likely in one phase to be reinforced by the vibration enough that it goes above threshold and the body realises that there's uneven pressure in the feet and corrects it - neat, no?
Has anyone else heard about the research into people balancing sticks on their fingertips, and how this has to do with random neuro-muscular noise, but generated by the body instead?
Re:Balance Vs. thresholds (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Balance Vs. thresholds (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm not sure if this is what you mean, but it's possible to stabilize a pendulum (e.g., a stick) in an inverted position by vibrating the base (e.g., your hand) rapidly. Here's the first link that I could find on Google. [bris.ac.uk] It's been a while since I've dealt with the math, but I think it has something to do with the Mathieu equation [wolfram.com] from Floquet Theory [wolfram.com].
</math lesson>
Re:Balance Vs. thresholds (Score:1)
I was speaking to someone in a pub (yes, I know...) who asserted that it was possible to balance an infinite length series of flexibly connected rods on a vibrating object if only you could calculate exactly the vibration required, which we can't. It'd be very cool though, imagine the towers of balancing pencils...
Re:Balance Vs. thresholds (Score:2)
You're probably right that the values would be impossible to calculate exactly, but you can still get a pretty good approximation with certain techniques.
Which reminds me, I should get to work on my math homework
Slashdot is feeding trolls (Score:5, Funny)
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
25 year olds. (Score:1)
Judging by most of the 25 years I know, this is not a good thing...
Is this before or after the 1/8th of weed and three 40's of King Cobra???
Vibrating Suit (Score:2, Funny)
It would be a crying shame if the vision were limited to "vibrating shoes."
Kit out a wetsuit with those buzzing bad boys, and watch the elderly jump, dance, and screw like 25 year olds.
Re:Vibrating Suit (Score:1)
I mis-read the topic of your post the first time.
Horrible mental image I have now.
Bah!
Neurons in the feet? (Score:2, Funny)
Damm if only i could get the neurons in my feet to learn how do dance! That'd be awesome!
Re:Neurons in the feet? (Score:1)
Yeah
I've got friends... (Score:2)
Re:I've got friends... (Score:2)
what a great opening line.
Good vibrations (Score:1)
I've heard that we 'see' things through tiny vibrations of our eyes... perhaps we could do the same thing to their eyeballs and make them better drivers (wider field of vison)
Re:Good vibrations (Score:3, Informative)
Light hitting the back of the eye causes (in the roughest possible terms) a change in electrical potential in the light sensitive cells, which is transmitted down neurons in the optic nerve (as electrical pulses) into the visual cortex of the brain, where it's interpreted in exceptionally clever ways we don't really understand. No vibrations to be seen, though.
Re:Good vibrations (Score:1)
I didn't.
This could be a blessing for some med conditons (Score:1)
Ugghh, yesss (Score:2)
I can see it now, people walking down the street having orgasms from the shockwaves of their vibrating shoes.
I've seen this first hand (Score:2)
Stochastic Resonance (Score:3, Informative)
Nothing new or magical in the theory, but it is a really cool application. Kudos to the researchers.
California to replace Florida as a place to retire (Score:4, Funny)
California, the state where Quake is more than just a game
and yet... (Score:1)
iBrator 2 ? (Score:3, Funny)
Oh, I see.
This is just the next version of the iBrator [sleeplessknights.com].
Snake Oil (Score:2, Insightful)
Let's see, how would you do a double blind experiment with these shoes? How can you get shoes that vibrate to not let someone know that they're vibrating?
Miracle cures like this seem to work the following way:
The sad part of all this is that the cure actually might work, simply because the vibration tells the person that the miracle shoes are working and therefore the person will try harder to balance. After all, they bought those miracle shoes at quite a hefty price, so therefore they should be working!
Never underestimate the value of a well-marketed placebo.
Re:Snake Oil (Score:1)
Could be. At a technical level, magnetic media requires a bias signal to properly take a recording. At least it did. Am I showing my age?
How you gonna prove it? Grandma's ability to better know when she's tipping over (pressure differences over the bottom of her stinky feet) could be the result of the vibrations moving the sensory devices (nerves) into their best dynamic range.
Hard to build a placebo that doesn't achieve the same effect. Never mind that smile on grandma's face.
wow, what a mental image... (Score:4, Funny)
Now I've got a picture in my head of dozens of seniors, linked arm in arm, moving helplessly
up and down the aisles at Walmart...
I'm sorry, I cant help it...it's just the way I am.
Linked arms? (Score:2)
stochastic resonance (Score:5, Interesting)
It's called stochastic ressonance.
It's used in some analog to digital converters, and in many other places in engineering, it's been used in electron microscopes, in radio telescopes.
And now, it turns out, it looks like it's used in people! What is really interesting is the question of whether or not the healthy adult body actually has automatic noise generators itself, for precisely this purpose, which may have weakened in the case of the elderly.
Re: (Score:2)
Now all old people... (Score:2)
Spelling? (Score:1)
ears (Score:2)
Balance (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Balance (Score:1)
I had dual acoustic neuromas (double the pleasure, double the fun!) and experience everything you've said. Even in well lit situations, my balance is precarious, I am able to get around usually just fine, but if I stumble, there is very little of a recovery mechanism.
I'm definitely going to see if I can contact this guy to find out more, tho after this article, he's probably experiencing some slashdotting-like effects himself.
Not Just for Old People (Score:2, Funny)
I know I for one love to play sports and whatnot, but there is this problem of me sucking atrociously. I can run really fast, but coordination is so poor that bad things happen to me at these breakneck speeds. In fact, I can hardly even watch sports with my poor balance (4 or 5 times fallen on the bleachers this season). Shoes like this could add a lot of enjoyment to my fraternities pick up football games. Hey, we could even try intermurals next year! And us engineers would be the only frat nerdy enough to know about it!
Ahem (Score:1)
How did I catch on so fast, you ask? You admitted being an engineer, in a fraternity, playing sports, and you're reading Slashdot. Clearly a real world impossibility... And your doc will figure it out just as quickly, especially when you ask for just one shoe. So get a backup, preferably for the other foot the throw him off...
Re:Not Just for Old People (Score:2)
No thanks.
Monarchs Of The Sea (Score:1)
Geriatric Overclocking Backlash? (Score:2)
Anyway, what I'm driving at is
Further, the article states:
"For electrical signals, the low levels of noise essentially tickle the membranes of the neurons," he said, making them more likely to fire when there is a physical stimulus of some amplitude. For mechanical signals, noise serves to boost weak stimuli. "The experiment is a good example of how noise lets a neuron fire in the company of a signal that it is normally unable to detect,'' Dr. Collins said."
That's great, sounds like they're simply boosting the baseline so that it takes a smaller signal to breach the neuron firing threshold. Well
Just a thought. This isn't a troll and I know even less about neuroscience than I know about cars (at least I know where to put the oil).
But... (Score:2)
all fine and dandy... (Score:1)
Lets hear it for vibrating cell phones and pagers!
-nwp
Why is it that I never think of shoes when I .... (Score:2)
It had to be said (Score:3, Funny)
(Sorry.)
Vibrations must be low level! (Score:2)
Ice skates and rollerblades have a natural vibration induced by imperfections in the surfaces you are skating on. (The same can be said of skiing I expect)On some poorly maintained ice surfaces you can get a mighty bumpy ride.
Hockey skates have recently (in the last 5-7 years) started including vibration reduction materials. As the level of vibration reduced the most noticeable effect at first is simply more comfort. That's why I bought into it, I had to be on my skates 8-12 hours a day.
As the vibrations were reduced to unnoticeable levels I started noticing improvements in my skating, and in the skating of my students and teammates. I always thought that practice had improved our balance, but it seems possible now that the equipment played an unintended role.
I'd love to see a study on this. Did we get an unintended benefit, or is it really just practice ? Some mix ? How much of each ?
I'd also like to see this, if it pans out, included as a feature in skates. The most serious injuries most hockey players, especially youth players, will endure come indirectly from inadequate balance. It would make my sport safer.
I am getting tired of seeing 13 year olds with the knees of 80 year olds after mulitiple surgeries.
Vibrations in the floor (Score:3, Funny)
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Blame the shoes (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Our feet can think? (Score:1)
Um, neurons are the fundamental building block of the nervous system. Yup, they're everywhere. In your fingers, in your toes... why, how did you -think- signals got to and from your extremities... oh, no, don't answer that...
Re:Possible use for MS patients? (Score:5, Interesting)
Diseases like Parkinson's and Huntingdon's may well be more complicated, though, since they're caused not by problems in the periperhal nervous system but by breakdowns in the systems in the brain that control movment.
Re:Possible use for MS patients? (Score:1)