Dynamic Locomotion Article 2020

Postural stability in human running with step-down perturbations: an experimental and numerical study

Titlepage step down i

Postural stability is one of the most crucial elements in bipedal locomotion. Bipeds are dynamically unstable and need to maintain their trunk upright against the rotations induced by the ground reaction forces (GRFs), especially when running. Gait studies report that the GRF vectors focus around a virtual point above the center of mass (VPA), while the trunk moves forward in pitch axis during the stance phase of human running. However, a recent simulation study suggests that a virtual point below the center of mass (VPB) might be present in human running, since a VPA yields backward trunk rotation during the stance phase. In this work, we perform a gait analysis to investigate the existence and location of the VP in human running at 5 m s−1, and support our findings numerically using the spring-loaded inverted pendulum model with a trunk (TSLIP). We extend our analysis to include perturbations in terrain height (visible and camouflaged), and investigate the response of the VP mechanism to step-down perturbations both experimentally and numerically. Our experimental results show that the human running gait displays a VPB of ≈ −30 cm and a forward trunk motion during the stance phase. The camouflaged step-down perturbations affect the location of the VPB. Our simulation results suggest that the VPB is able to encounter the step-down perturbations and bring the system back to its initial equilibrium state.

Author(s): Drama, Özge and Vielemeyer, Johanna and Badri-Spröwitz, Alexander and Müller, Roy
Journal: Royal Society Open Science
Volume: 7
Number (issue): 11
Pages: 200570
Year: 2020
Month: November
Day: 18
Bibtex Type: Article (article)
DOI: 10.1098/rsos.200570
State: Published
URL: https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/abs/10.1098/rsos.200570
Electronic Archiving: grant_archive

BibTex

@article{drama2020c,
  title = {Postural stability in human running with step-down perturbations: an experimental and numerical study},
  journal = {Royal Society Open Science},
  abstract = {Postural stability is one of the most crucial elements in bipedal
  locomotion. Bipeds are dynamically unstable and need to maintain their
  trunk upright against the rotations induced by the ground reaction forces
  (GRFs), especially when running. Gait studies report that the GRF vectors
  focus around a virtual point above the center of mass (VPA), while the trunk
  moves forward in pitch axis during the stance phase of human running.
  However, a recent simulation study suggests that a virtual point below the
  center of mass (VPB) might be present in human running, since a VPA
  yields backward trunk rotation during the stance phase. In this work, we
  perform a gait analysis to investigate the existence and location of the
  VP in human running at 5 m s−1, and support our findings numerically
  using the spring-loaded inverted pendulum model with a trunk (TSLIP).
  We extend our analysis to include perturbations in terrain height (visible
  and camouflaged), and investigate the response of the VP mechanism
  to step-down perturbations both experimentally and numerically. Our
  experimental results show that the human running gait displays a VPB
  of ≈ −30 cm and a forward trunk motion during the stance phase. The
  camouflaged step-down perturbations affect the location of the VPB. Our
  simulation results suggest that the VPB is able to encounter the step-down
  perturbations and bring the system back to its initial equilibrium state.},
  volume = {7},
  number = {11},
  pages = {200570},
  month = nov,
  year = {2020},
  slug = {postural-stability-in-human-running-with-step-down-perturbations-an-experimental-and-numerical-study},
  author = {Drama, Özge and Vielemeyer, Johanna and Badri-Spr{\"o}witz, Alexander and M{\"u}ller, Roy},
  url = {https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/abs/10.1098/rsos.200570},
  month_numeric = {11}
}