In clinical practice, clinical gait analysis is often used to compare the gait of patients with locomotor disorders and the gait of an asymptomatic population. However, the gait velocities between these two populations may differ and some studies have clearly shown that it may affect the interpretation of kinematics, kinetics, spatio-temporal parameters and electromyographic patterns. The aim of
... [Show full abstract] this study was thus to explore if gait velocity could also have an influence on the strategies of head stabilisation during gait in an asymptomatic population. The results are similar with the literature at spontaneous gait velocity and suggest the use of block strategies in both sagittal and transversal planes at lower velocities.