Bone-Free: Soft Mechanics for Adaptive Locomotion

被引:38
作者
Trimmer, B. A. [1 ]
Lin, Huai-ti [2 ]
机构
[1] Tufts Univ, Sch Arts & Sci, Dept Biol, Medford, MA 02155 USA
[2] Howard Hughes Med Inst, Ashburn, VA USA
关键词
MULTIDENDRITIC SENSORY NEURONS; MANDUCA-SEXTA; ELECTROMYOGRAPHIC ANALYSES; WANDERING BEHAVIOR; MOTOR CONTROL; BODY-WALL; CATERPILLAR; MUSCLE; EVOLUTION; TENTACLES;
D O I
10.1093/icb/icu076
中图分类号
Q95 [动物学];
学科分类号
071002 ;
摘要
Muscular hydrostats (such as mollusks), and fluid-filled animals (such as annelids), can exploit their constant-volume tissues to transfer forces and displacements in predictable ways, much as articulated animals use hinges and levers. Although larval insects contain pressurized fluids, they also have internal air tubes that are compressible and, as a result, they have more uncontrolled degrees of freedom. Therefore, the mechanisms by which larval insects control their movements are expected to reveal useful strategies for designing soft biomimetic robots. Using caterpillars as a tractable model system, it is now possible to identify the biomechanical and neural strategies for controlling movements in such highly deformable animals. For example, the tobacco hornworm, Manduca sexta, can stiffen its body by increasing muscular tension (and therefore body pressure) but the internal cavity (hemocoel) is not iso-barometric, nor is pressure used to directly control the movements of its limbs. Instead, fluid and tissues flow within the hemocoel and the body is soft and flexible to conform to the substrate. Even the gut contributes to the biomechanics of locomotion; it is decoupled from the movements of the body wall and slides forward within the body cavity at the start of each step. During crawling the body is kept in tension for part of the stride and compressive forces are exerted on the substrate along the axis of the caterpillar, thereby using the environment as a skeleton. The timing of muscular activity suggests that crawling is coordinated by proleg-retractor motoneurons and that the large segmental muscles produce anterograde waves of lifting that do not require precise timing. This strategy produces a robust form of locomotion in which the kinematics changes little with orientation. In different species of caterpillar, the presence of prolegs on particular body segments is related to alternative kinematics such as "inching.'' This suggests a mechanism for the evolution of different gaits through changes in the usage of prolegs, rather than, through extensive alterations in the motor program controlling the body wall. Some of these findings are being used to design and test novel control-strategies for highly deformable robots. These "softworm'' devices are providing new insights into the challenges faced by any soft animal navigating in a terrestrial environment.
引用
收藏
页码:1122 / 1135
页数:14
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