首页 /研究 /Endpoint Stiffness of the Arm Is Directionally Tuned to Instability in the Environment
OTHER

Endpoint Stiffness of the Arm Is Directionally Tuned to Instability in the Environment

David W. Franklin, Gary Liaw, Theodore E. Milner, Rieko Osu, Etienne Burdet, Mitsuo Kawato

发表年份
2007
引用次数
307
访问权限
开放获取

摘要

It has been shown that humans are able to selectively control the endpoint impedance of their arms when moving in an unstable environment. However, directional instability was only examined for the case in which the main contribution was from coactivation of biarticular muscles. The goal of this study was to examine whether, in general, the CNS activates the sets of muscles that contribute to selective control of impedance in particular directions. Subjects performed reaching movements in three differently oriented unstable environments generated by a robotic manipulandum. After subjects had learned to make relatively straight reaching movements in the unstable force field, the endpoint stiffness of the limb was measured at the midpoint of the movements. For each force field, the endpoint stiffness increased in a specific direction, whereas there was little change in stiffness in the orthogonal direction. The increase in stiffness was oriented along the direction of instability in the environment, which caused the major axis of the stiffness ellipse to rotate toward the instability in the environment. This study confirms that the CNS is able to control the endpoint impedance of the limbs and selectively adapt it to the environment. Furthermore, it supports the idea that the CNS incorporates an impedance controller that acts to ensure stability, reduce movement variability, and reduce metabolic cost.

关键词

StiffnessInstabilityControl theory (sociology)CoactivationImpedance controlController (irrigation)Electrical impedanceMotor controlComputer sciencePhysics

相关论文

查看 OTHER 分类全部论文