Li Chen
Department of Mechanical Engineering, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland 21218, USA.
Integr Comp Biol. 2024 Sep 27;64(3):674-693. doi: 10.1093/icb/icae124.
Animals and robots must self-right on the ground after overturning. Biology research has described various strategies and motor patterns in many species. Robotics research has devised many strategies. However, we do not well understand the physical principles of how the need to generate mechanical energy to overcome the potential energy barrier governs behavioral strategies and 3D body rotations given the morphology. Here, I review progress on this which I led studying cockroaches self-righting on level, flat, solid, low-friction ground, by integrating biology experiments, robotic modeling, and physics modeling. Animal experiments using three species (Madagascar hissing, American, and discoid cockroaches) found that ground self-righting is strenuous and often requires multiple attempts to succeed. Two species (American and discoid cockroaches) often self-right dynamically, using kinetic energy to overcome the barrier. All three species use and often stochastically transition across diverse strategies. In these strategies, propelling motions are often accompanied by perturbing motions. All three species often display complex yet stereotyped body rotation. They all roll more in successful attempts than in failed ones, which lowers the barrier, as revealed by a simplistic 3D potential energy landscape of a rigid body self-righting. Experiments of an initial robot self-righting via rotation about a fixed axis revealed that the longer and faster appendages push, the more mechanical energy can be gained to overcome the barrier. However, the cockroaches rarely achieve this. To further understand the physical principles of strenuous ground self-righting, we focused on the discoid cockroach's leg-assisted winged self-righting. In this strategy, wings propel against the ground to pitch the body up but are unable to overcome the highest pitch barrier. Meanwhile, legs flail in the air to perturb the body sideways to self-right via rolling. Experiments using a refined robot and an evolving 3D potential energy landscape revealed that, although wing propelling cannot generate sufficient kinetic energy to overcome the highest pitch barrier, it reduces the barrier to allow small kinetic energy from the perturbing legs to probabilistically overcome the barrier to self-right via rolling. Thus, only by combining propelling and perturbing can self-righting be achieved when it is so strenuous; this physical constraint leads to the stereotyped body rotation. Finally, multi-body dynamics simulation and template modeling revealed that the animal's substantial randomness in wing and leg motions helps it, by chance, to find good coordination, which accumulates more mechanical energy to overcome the barrier, thus increasing the likelihood of self-righting.
动物和机器人在翻倒后必须在地面上自行翻身。生物学研究已经描述了许多物种的各种策略和运动模式。机器人研究也设计了许多策略。然而,鉴于形态学特征,我们并不清楚为克服势能障碍而产生机械能的需求是如何支配行为策略和三维身体旋转的物理原理。在此,我回顾一下我主导的关于蟑螂在水平、平坦、坚实、低摩擦地面上自行翻身的研究进展,该研究整合了生物学实验、机器人建模和物理建模。对三种蟑螂(马达加斯加发声蟑螂、美国蟑螂和盘状蟑螂)进行的动物实验发现,在地面上自行翻身很费力,通常需要多次尝试才能成功。两种蟑螂(美国蟑螂和盘状蟑螂)经常动态地自行翻身,利用动能来克服障碍。所有三种蟑螂都会使用多种策略,并且经常随机切换策略。在这些策略中,推进动作通常伴随着干扰动作。所有三种蟑螂经常表现出复杂但刻板的身体旋转。正如刚体自行翻身的简化三维势能景观所揭示的那样,它们在成功尝试中比在失败尝试中翻滚得更多,这降低了障碍。最初通过绕固定轴旋转进行机器人自行翻身的实验表明,附肢推得越长越快,就能获得越多的机械能来克服障碍。然而,蟑螂很少能做到这一点。为了进一步理解费力的地面自行翻身的物理原理,我们聚焦于盘状蟑螂的腿部辅助带翅自行翻身策略。在这种策略中,翅膀抵着地面推动以使身体向上倾斜,但无法克服最高的倾斜障碍。与此同时,腿部在空中摆动以干扰身体向侧面翻滚从而自行翻身。使用改进的机器人和不断演变的三维势能景观进行的实验表明,尽管翅膀推动无法产生足够的动能来克服最高的倾斜障碍,但它降低了障碍,使来自干扰腿部的小动能有可能通过翻滚克服障碍从而自行翻身。因此,当自行翻身如此费力时,只有将推动和干扰结合起来才能实现;这种物理限制导致了刻板的身体旋转。最后,多体动力学模拟和模板建模表明,动物翅膀和腿部运动的大量随机性有助于它偶然找到良好的协调性,从而积累更多的机械能来克服障碍,进而增加自行翻身的可能性。