Rosendo Andre, Liu Xiangxiao, Shimizu Masahiro, Hosoda Koh
Graduate School of Engineering Science, Osaka University, Osaka, Japan.
Bioinspir Biomim. 2015 Jan 19;10(1):016008. doi: 10.1088/1748-3190/10/1/016008.
When humans hop, attitude recovery can be observed in both the sagittal and frontal planes. While it is agreed that the brain plays an important role in leg placement, the role of low-level feedback (the stretch reflex) on frontal plane stabilization remains unclear. Seeking to better understand the contribution of the soleus stretch reflex to rolling stability, we performed experiments on a biomimetic humanoid hopping robot. Various reflex responses to touching the floor, ranging from no response to long muscle activations, were examined, and the effect of a delay upon touching the floor was also examined. We found that the stretch reflex brought the system closer to stable, straight hopping. The presence of a delay did not affect the results; both the cases with and without a delay outperformed the case without a reflex response. The results of this study highlight the importance of low-level control in locomotion for which body stabilization does not require higher-level signals.
当人类跳跃时,在矢状面和额状面都能观察到姿态恢复。虽然人们一致认为大脑在腿部放置中起着重要作用,但低级反馈(牵张反射)在额状面稳定中的作用仍不清楚。为了更好地理解比目鱼肌牵张反射对滚动稳定性的贡献,我们在一个仿生类人跳跃机器人上进行了实验。研究了从无反应到长时间肌肉激活等各种对触地的反射反应,还研究了触地延迟的影响。我们发现牵张反射使系统更接近稳定、直线的跳跃。延迟的存在并不影响结果;有延迟和无延迟的情况都比无反射反应的情况表现更好。这项研究的结果突出了低级控制在运动中的重要性,对于这种运动,身体稳定不需要高级信号。