Westneat Mark W
Department of Zoology, Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago, IL 60605, USA.
J Theor Biol. 2003 Aug 7;223(3):269-81. doi: 10.1016/s0022-5193(03)00058-4.
Fish skulls are complex kinetic systems with movable components that are powered by muscles. Cranial muscles for jaw closing pull the mandible around a point of rotation at the jaw joint using a third-order lever mechanism. The present study develops a lever model for the jaw of fishes that uses muscle design and the Hill equation for nonlinear length-tension properties of muscle to calculate dynamic power output. The model uses morphometric data on skeletal dimensions and muscle proportions in order to predict behavior and force transmission mediated by lever action. The computer model calculates a range of dynamic parameters of jaw function including muscle force, torque, effective mechanical advantage, jaw velocity, bite duration, bite force, work and power. A complete list of required morphometrics is presented and a software program (MandibLever 2.0) is available for implementing lever analysis. Results show that simulations yield kinematics and timing profiles similar to actual fish feeding events. Simulation of muscle properties shows that mandibles reach their peak velocity near the start of jaw closing, peak force at the end of jaw closing, and peak power output at about 25% of the closing cycle time. Adductor jaw muscles with different mechanical designs must have different contractile properties and/or different muscle activity patterns to coordinate jaw closing. The effective mechanical advantage calculated by the model is considerably lower than the mechanical advantage estimated from morphological lever ratios, suggesting that previous studies of morphological lever ratios have overestimated force and underestimated velocity transmission to the mandible. A biomechanical model of jaw closing can be used to interpret the mechanics of a wide range of jaw mechanisms and will enable studies of the functional results of developmental and evolutionary changes in skull morphology and physiology.
鱼类头骨是复杂的动力系统,具有由肌肉驱动的可移动部件。用于闭口的颅肌利用三阶杠杆机制,围绕颌关节的一个旋转点拉动下颌骨。本研究开发了一种鱼类颌骨的杠杆模型,该模型利用肌肉设计和肌肉非线性长度 - 张力特性的希尔方程来计算动态功率输出。该模型使用骨骼尺寸和肌肉比例的形态测量数据,以预测由杠杆作用介导的行为和力的传递。计算机模型计算了一系列颌骨功能的动态参数,包括肌肉力、扭矩、有效机械优势、颌骨速度、咬合持续时间、咬合力、功和功率。文中列出了所需形态测量的完整清单,并提供了一个软件程序(MandibLever 2.0)用于进行杠杆分析。结果表明,模拟产生的运动学和时间分布与实际鱼类摄食事件相似。对肌肉特性的模拟表明,下颌骨在闭口开始时接近达到峰值速度,在闭口结束时达到峰值力,在闭口周期时间的约25%时达到峰值功率输出。具有不同机械设计的内收颌肌必须具有不同的收缩特性和/或不同的肌肉活动模式来协调闭口。该模型计算出的有效机械优势明显低于从形态学杠杆比率估计的机械优势,这表明先前对形态学杠杆比率的研究高估了力,并低估了传递到下颌骨的速度。一种闭口的生物力学模型可用于解释各种颌骨机制的力学原理,并将有助于研究头骨形态和生理学发育及进化变化的功能结果。