Jump to content

Preferred walking speed

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Walking speed)

The preferred walking speed is the speed at which humans or animals choose to walk. Many people tend to walk at about 1.42 metres per second (5.1 km/h; 3.2 mph; 4.7 ft/s).[1][2][3] Individuals may find slower or faster speeds uncomfortable.

Horses have also demonstrated normal, narrow distributions of preferred walking speed within a given gait, which suggests that the process of speed selection may follow similar patterns across species.[4] Preferred walking speed has important clinical applications as an indicator of mobility and independence. For example, elderly people or people suffering from osteoarthritis must walk more slowly. Improving (increasing) people's preferred walking speed is a significant clinical goal in these populations.[citation needed]

People have suggested mechanical, energetic, physiological and psychological factors as contributors to speed selection. Probably, individuals face a trade-off between the numerous costs associated with different walking speeds, and select a speed which minimizes these costs. For example, they may trade off time to destination, which is minimized at fast walking speeds, and metabolic rate, muscle force or joint stress. These are minimized at slower walking speeds. Broadly, increasing value of time, motivation, or metabolic efficiency may cause people to walk more quickly. Conversely, aging, joint pain, instability, incline, metabolic rate and visual decline cause people to walk more slowly.

Value of time

[edit]

Commonly, individuals place some value on their time. Economic theory therefore predicts that value-of-time is a key factor influencing preferred walking speed.

Levine and Norenzayan (1999) measured preferred walking speeds of urban pedestrians in 31 countries and found that walking speed is positively correlated with the country's per capita GDP and purchasing power parity, as well as with a measure of individualism in the country's society.[3] It is plausible that affluence correlates with actual value considerations for time spent walking, and this may explain why people in affluent countries tend to walk more quickly.

This idea is broadly consistent with common intuition. Everyday situations often change the value of time. For example, when walking to catch a bus, the value of the one minute immediately before the bus has departed may be worth 30 minutes of time (the time saved not waiting for the next bus). Supporting this idea, Darley and Bateson show that individuals who are hurried under experimental conditions are less likely to stop in response to a distraction, and so they arrive at their destination sooner.[5]

Energetics

[edit]

Energy minimization is widely considered a primary goal of the central nervous system.[6] The rate at which an organism expends metabolic energy while walking (gross metabolic rate) increases nonlinearly with increasing speed. However, they also require a continuous basal metabolic rate to maintain normal function. The energetic cost of walking itself is therefore best understood by subtracting basal metabolic rate from total metabolic rate, yielding Final metabolic rate. In human walking, net metabolic rate also increases nonlinearly with speed. These measures of walking energetics are based on how much oxygen people consume per unit time. Many locomotion tasks, however, require walking a fixed distance rather than for a set time. Dividing gross metabolic rate by walking speed results in gross cost of transport. For human walking, gross cost of transport is U-shaped. Similarly, dividing net metabolic rate by walking speed yields a U-shaped net cost of transport. These curves reflect the cost of moving a given distance at a given speed and may better reflect the energetic cost associated with walking.

Ralston (1958) showed that humans tend to walk at or near the speed that minimizes gross cost of transport. He showed that gross cost of transport is minimized at about 1.23 m/s (4.4 km/h; 2.8 mph), which corresponded to the preferred speed of his subjects.[7] Supporting this, Wickler et al. (2000) showed that the preferred speed of horses both uphill and on the level corresponds closely to the speed that minimizes their gross cost of transport.[8] Among other gait costs that human walkers choose to minimize, this observation has led many to suggest that people minimize cost and maximize efficiency during locomotion.[6] Because gross cost of transport includes velocity, gross cost of transport includes an inherent value of time. Subsequent research suggests that individuals may walk marginally faster than the speed that minimizes gross cost of transport under some experimental setups, although this may be due to how preferred walking speed was measured.[1]

In contrast, other researchers have suggested that gross cost of transport may not represent the metabolic cost of walking. People must continue to expend their basal metabolic rate regardless of whether they are walking, suggesting that the metabolic cost of walking should not include basal metabolic rate. Some researchers have therefore used net metabolic rate instead of gross metabolic rate to characterize the cost of locomotion.[9] Net cost of transport reaches a minimum at about 1.05 m/s (3.8 km/h; 2.3 mph). Healthy pedestrians walk faster than this in many situations.

Metabolic input rate may also directly limit preferred walking speed. Aging is associated with reduced aerobic capacity (reduced VO2 max). Malatesta et al. (2004) suggests that walking speed in elderly individuals is limited by aerobic capacity; elderly individuals are unable to walk faster because they cannot sustain that level of activity.[10] For example, 80-year-old individuals are walking at 60% of their VO2 max even when walking at speeds significantly slower than those observed in younger individuals.

Biomechanics

[edit]

Biomechanical factors such as mechanical work, stability, and joint or muscle forces may also influence human walking speed. Walking faster requires additional external mechanical work per step.[11] Similarly, swinging the legs relative to the center of mass requires some internal mechanical work. As faster walking is accomplished with both longer and faster steps, internal mechanical work also increases with increasing walking speed.[12] Therefore, both internal and external mechanical work per step increases with increasing speed. Individuals may try to reduce either external or internal mechanical work by walking more slowly, or may select a speed at which mechanical energy recovery is at a maximum.[13]

Stability may be another factor influencing speed selection. Hunter et al. (2010) showed that individuals use energetically suboptimal gaits when walking downhill. He suggests that people may instead be choosing gait parameters that maximize stability while walking downhill. This suggests that under adverse conditions such as down hills, gait patterns may favor stability over speed.[14]

Individual joint and muscle biomechanics also directly affect walking speed. Norris showed that elderly individuals walked faster when their ankle extensors were augmented by an external pneumatic muscle.[15] Muscle force, specifically in the gastrocnemius and/or soleus, may limit walking speed in certain populations and lead to slower preferred speeds. Similarly, patients with ankle osteoarthritis walked faster after a complete ankle replacement than before. This suggests that reducing joint reaction forces or joint pain may factor into speed selection.

Visual flow

[edit]

The rate at which the environment flows past the eyes seems to be a mechanism for regulating walking speed. In virtual environments, the gain in visual flow can be decoupled from a person's actual walking speed, much as one might experience when walking on a conveyor belt. There, the environment flows past an individual more quickly than their walking speed would predict (higher than normal visual gain). At higher than normal visual gains, individuals prefer to walk more slowly, while at lower than normal visual gains, individuals prefer to walk more quickly.[2] This behavior is consistent with returning the visually observed speed back toward the preferred speed and suggests that vision is used correctively to maintain walking speed at a value that is perceived to be optimal. Moreover, the dynamics of this visual influence on preferred walking speed are rapid—when visual gains are changed suddenly, individuals adjust their speed within a few seconds.[16] The timing and direction of these responses strongly indicate that a rapid predictive process informed by visual feedback helps select preferred speed, perhaps to complement a slower optimization process that directly senses metabolic rate and iteratively adapts gait to minimize it.

As exercise

[edit]

With the wide availability of inexpensive pedometers, medical professionals recommend walking as an exercise for cardiac health and/or weight loss. The NIH gives the following guidelines:

Based on currently available evidence, we propose the following preliminary indices be used to classify pedometer-determined physical activity in healthy adults: (i). <5000 steps/day may be used as a 'sedentary lifestyle index'; (ii). 5000-7499 steps/day is typical of daily activity excluding sports/exercise and might be considered 'low active'; (iii). 7500-9999 likely includes some volitional activities (and/or elevated occupational activity demands) and might be considered 'somewhat active'; and (iv). >or=10000 steps/day indicates the point that should be used to classify individuals as 'active'. Individuals who take >12500 steps/day are likely to be classified as 'highly active'.[17]

The situation becomes slightly more complex when preferred walking speed is introduced. The faster the pace, the more calories burned if weight loss is a goal. Maximum heart rate for exercise (220 minus age), when compared to charts of "fat burning goals" support many of the references that give the average of 1.4 m/s (3.1 mph), as within this target range. Pedometers average 100 steps a minute in this range (depending on individual stride), or one and a half to two hours to reach a daily total of 10,000 or more steps (100 minutes at 100 steps per minute would be 10,000 steps).[18]

In urban design

[edit]

The typical walking speed of 1.4 metres per second (5.0 km/h; 3.1 mph; 4.6 ft/s) is recommended by design guides including the Design Manual for Roads and Bridges. Transport for London recommend 1.33 metres per second (4.8 km/h; 3.0 mph; 4.4 ft/s) in the PTAL methodology.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Browning, R. C., Baker, E. A., Herron, J. A. and Kram, R. (2006). "Effects of obesity and sex on the energetic cost and preferred speed of walking". Journal of Applied Physiology. 100 (2): 390–398. doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.00767.2005. PMID 16210434.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  2. ^ a b Mohler, B. J., Thompson, W. B., Creem-Regehr, S. H., Pick, H. L. Jr, Warren, W. H. Jr. (2007). "Visual flow influences gait transition speed and preferred walking speed". Experimental Brain Research. 181 (2): 221–228. doi:10.1007/s00221-007-0917-0. PMID 17372727. S2CID 7032232.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  3. ^ a b Levine, R. V. & Norenzayan, A. (1999). "The Pace of Life in 31 Countries" (PDF). Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology. 30 (2): 178–205. doi:10.1177/0022022199030002003. hdl:2027.42/67419. S2CID 5799354.
  4. ^ Hoyt, D. F. & Taylor, C. R. (1981). "Gait and the energetics of locomotion in horses". Nature. 292 (5820): 239–240. Bibcode:1981Natur.292..239H. doi:10.1038/292239a0. S2CID 26841475.
  5. ^ Darley, J. M. & Batson, C. D. (1973). ""From Jerusalem to Jericho": A study of situational and dispositional variables in helping behavior". Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. 27 (1): 100–108. doi:10.1037/h0034449.
  6. ^ a b Alexander, McNeill R. (2002). "Energetics and optimization of human walking and running: The 2000 Raymond Pearl memorial lecture" (PDF). American Journal of Human Biology. 14 (5): 641–648. doi:10.1002/ajhb.10067. PMID 12203818. S2CID 24280616.
  7. ^ Ralston, H. (1958). "Energy–speed relation and optimal speed during level walking" (PDF). Int. Z. Angew. Physiol. Einschl. Arbeitphysiol. 17 (4): 277–283. doi:10.1007/BF00698754. PMID 13610523. S2CID 22233015.
  8. ^ Wickler, S. J., Hoyt, D. F., Cogger, E. A. and Hirschbein, M. H. (2000). "Preferred speed and cost of transport: the effect of incline" (PDF). Journal of Experimental Biology. 203 (14): 2195–2200. doi:10.1242/jeb.203.14.2195. PMID 10862731.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  9. ^ Snaterse, M., Ton, R., Kuo, A. D. and Donelan, J. M. (2011). "Distinct fast and slow processes contribute to the selection of preferred step frequency during human walking" (PDF). Journal of Applied Physiology. 110 (6): 1682–1690. doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.00536.2010. PMC 4182286. PMID 21393467.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  10. ^ Malatesta, D., Simar, D., Dauvilliers, Y., Candau, R., Saad, H., Préfaut, C. and Caillaud, C. (2004). "Aerobic determinants of the decline in preferred walking speed in healthy, active 65- and 80-year-olds". European Journal of Physiology. 447 (6): 915–921. doi:10.1007/s00424-003-1212-y. PMID 14666424. S2CID 2216251.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  11. ^ Donelan, J. M., Kram, R. and Kuo, A. D. (2002). "Mechanical work for step-to-step transitions is a major determinant of the metabolic cost of human walking". Journal of Experimental Biology. 205 (23): 3717–3727. doi:10.1242/jeb.205.23.3717. PMID 12409498.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  12. ^ Doke, J., Donelan, J. M. and Kuo, A. D. (2005). "Mechanics and energetics of swinging the human leg" (PDF). Journal of Experimental Biology. 208 (3): 439–445. doi:10.1242/jeb.01408. PMID 15671332.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  13. ^ Alexander, R. (1991). "Energy-saving mechanisms in walking and running". Journal of Experimental Biology. 160 (1): 55–69. doi:10.1242/jeb.160.1.55. PMID 1960518.
  14. ^ Hunter, L. C., Hendrix, E. C. and Dean, J. C. (2010). "The cost of walking downhill: Is the preferred gait energetically optimal?". Journal of Biomechanics. 43 (10): 1910–1915. doi:10.1016/j.jbiomech.2010.03.030. PMID 20399434.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  15. ^ Norris, J. A., Granata, K. P., Mitros, M. R., Byrne, E. M. and Marsh, A. P. (2007). "Effect of augmented plantarflexion power on preferred walking speed and economy in young and older adults". Gait & Posture. 25 (4): 620–627. doi:10.1016/j.gaitpost.2006.07.002. PMID 16905320.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  16. ^ O’Connor, S. M., Donelan, J. M. (2012). "Fast visual prediction and slow optimization of preferred walking speed". Journal of Neurophysiology. 107 (9): 2549–59. doi:10.1152/jn.00866.2011. PMID 22298829.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  17. ^ Tudor-Locke C, Bassett DR (2004). "How many steps/day are enough? Preliminary pedometer indices for public health". Sports Med. 34 (1): 1–8. doi:10.2165/00007256-200434010-00001. PMID 14715035. S2CID 13212390.
  18. ^ Charts of walking speed ranges for weight loss or health