Optimal Control of Non-ballistic Muscular Movements: A Constraint-Based Performance Criterion for Rising From a ChairSource: Journal of Biomechanical Engineering:;1995:;volume( 117 ):;issue: 001::page 15DOI: 10.1115/1.2792265Publisher: The American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
Abstract: To understand how humans perform non-ballistic movements, we have developed an optimal control model to simulate rising from a chair. The human body was modeled as a three-segment, articulated, planar linkage, with adjacent links joined together by frictionless revolutes. The skeleton was actuated by eight musculotendinous units with each muscle modeled as a three-element entity in series with tendon. Because rising from a chair presents a relatively ambiguous performance criterion, we chose to evaluate a number of different performance criteria, each based upon a fundamental dynamical property of movement: muscle force. Through a quantitative comparison of model and experiment, we found that neither a minimum-impulse nor a minimum-energy criterion is able to reproduce the major features of standing up. Instead, we introduce a performance criterion based upon an important and previously overlooked dynamical property of muscle: the time derivative of force. Our motivation for incorporating such a quantity into a mathematical description of the goal of a motor task is founded upon the belief that non-ballistic movements are controlled by gradual increases in muscle force rather than by rapid changes in force over time. By computing the optimal control solution for rising from a static squatting position, we show that minimizing the integral of a quantity which depends upon the time derivative of muscle force meets an important physiological requirement: it minimizes the peak forces developed by muscles throughout the movement. Furthermore, by computing the optimal control solution for rising from a chair, we demonstrate that multi-joint coordination is dictated not only by the choice of a performance criterion but by the presence of a motion constraint as well.
keyword(s): Motion , Optimal control , Muscle , Force , Physiology , Tendons , Engines , Impulse (Physics) AND Linkages ,
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| contributor author | M. G. Pandy | |
| contributor author | B. A. Garner | |
| contributor author | F. C. Anderson | |
| date accessioned | 2017-05-08T23:46:41Z | |
| date available | 2017-05-08T23:46:41Z | |
| date copyright | February, 1995 | |
| date issued | 1995 | |
| identifier issn | 0148-0731 | |
| identifier other | JBENDY-25949#15_1.pdf | |
| identifier uri | http://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl/handle/yetl/115007 | |
| description abstract | To understand how humans perform non-ballistic movements, we have developed an optimal control model to simulate rising from a chair. The human body was modeled as a three-segment, articulated, planar linkage, with adjacent links joined together by frictionless revolutes. The skeleton was actuated by eight musculotendinous units with each muscle modeled as a three-element entity in series with tendon. Because rising from a chair presents a relatively ambiguous performance criterion, we chose to evaluate a number of different performance criteria, each based upon a fundamental dynamical property of movement: muscle force. Through a quantitative comparison of model and experiment, we found that neither a minimum-impulse nor a minimum-energy criterion is able to reproduce the major features of standing up. Instead, we introduce a performance criterion based upon an important and previously overlooked dynamical property of muscle: the time derivative of force. Our motivation for incorporating such a quantity into a mathematical description of the goal of a motor task is founded upon the belief that non-ballistic movements are controlled by gradual increases in muscle force rather than by rapid changes in force over time. By computing the optimal control solution for rising from a static squatting position, we show that minimizing the integral of a quantity which depends upon the time derivative of muscle force meets an important physiological requirement: it minimizes the peak forces developed by muscles throughout the movement. Furthermore, by computing the optimal control solution for rising from a chair, we demonstrate that multi-joint coordination is dictated not only by the choice of a performance criterion but by the presence of a motion constraint as well. | |
| publisher | The American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) | |
| title | Optimal Control of Non-ballistic Muscular Movements: A Constraint-Based Performance Criterion for Rising From a Chair | |
| type | Journal Paper | |
| journal volume | 117 | |
| journal issue | 1 | |
| journal title | Journal of Biomechanical Engineering | |
| identifier doi | 10.1115/1.2792265 | |
| journal fristpage | 15 | |
| journal lastpage | 26 | |
| identifier eissn | 1528-8951 | |
| keywords | Motion | |
| keywords | Optimal control | |
| keywords | Muscle | |
| keywords | Force | |
| keywords | Physiology | |
| keywords | Tendons | |
| keywords | Engines | |
| keywords | Impulse (Physics) AND Linkages | |
| tree | Journal of Biomechanical Engineering:;1995:;volume( 117 ):;issue: 001 | |
| contenttype | Fulltext |