Publication | Closed Access
Enlarging regions of stable running with segmented legs
29
Citations
16
References
2008
Year
Unknown Venue
Robot KinematicsEngineeringMechanical EngineeringMovement BiomechanicsMotor ControlMovement AnalysisKinesiologyMechanical ControlBiomechanicsLegged RobotKinematicsHealth SciencesLeg SegmentationMechatronicsBipedal LocomotionLeg CompressionMechanical SystemsMusculoskeletal InteractionHuman MovementRobotics
In human and animal running spring-like leg behavior is found, and similar concepts have been demonstrated by various robotic systems in the past. In general, a spring-mass model provides self-stabilizing characteristics against external perturbations originated in leg-ground interactions and motor control. Although most of these systems made use of linear spring-like legs. The question addressed in this paper is the influence of leg segmentation (i.e. the use of rotational joint and two limb-segments) to the self-stability of running, as it appears to be a common design principle in nature. This paper shows that, with the leg segmentation, the system is able to perform self-stable running behavior in significantly broader ranges of running speed and control parameters (e.g. control of angle of attack at touchdown, and adjustment of spring stiffness) by exploiting a nonlinear relationship between leg force and leg compression. The concept is investigated by using a two- segment leg model and a robotic platform, which demonstrate the plausibility in the real world.
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