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  2. The 12 Best Running Shoes for High Arches, According To a ...

    www.aol.com/asked-podiatrist-runner-help-finding...

    There are three types of running shoes: motion-control, neutral and stability: Motion-control shoes are ideal for pronators, those with flat arches. Neutral/cushioning shoes are for neutral ...

  3. 9 Game-Changing Arch Support Shoes Your Feet Will Be ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/10-game-changing-arch...

    Stability and Motion Control Arch support is the star of the shoe, but it doesn't work alone in keeping feet aligned and moving well in shoes. So, look for shoes that offer excellent stability ...

  4. Nurses Say These Are the Best Shoes for Standing all Day - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/comfy-shoes-actually...

    For the best shoes for plantar fasciitis, nurses will generally want to look for a shoe “that has stability throughout the mid-foot with flexibility at the ball of the foot,” says Sharkey.

  5. Pronation of the foot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pronation_of_the_foot

    Motion control shoes are a specific type of running shoe designed to limit these excessive foot motions by reducing the amount of plantar force (a force generated by excess pronation). Motion control and stability shoes have increased medial support which may increase stability to the foot and leg and lower the amount of pronation in the foot. [10]

  6. Minimalist shoe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minimalist_shoe

    Minimalist shoes are defined as providing "minimal interference with the natural movement of the foot, because of its high flexibility, low heel to toe drop, weight and stack height, and the absence of motion control and stability devices." [1] Minimalist shoes provide more sensory contact for the foot on the ground while simultaneously ...

  7. Locomotor effects of shoes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Locomotor_Effects_of_Shoes

    The range of the ankle motion is also significantly greater in the negative heeled shoes, remaining in dorsiflexion longer throughout the stance and swing phases of gait. The increased duration of dorsiflexion leads to lengthening of the gastrocnemius and soleus muscle-tendon units and the length of the moment arm of the Achilles tendon.