Publications by authors named "Dick Taylor"

The shape of skeletal muscle varies remarkably-with important implications for locomotor performance. In many muscles, the fibres are arranged at an angle relative to the tendons' line of action, termed the pennation angle. These pennate muscles allow more sarcomeres to be packed side by side, enabling the muscle to generate higher maximum forces for a given muscle size.

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Skeletal muscles change shape when they contract. Current insights into the effects of shape change on muscle function have primarily come from experiments on isolated muscles operating at maximal activation levels. However, when muscles contract and change shape, the forces they apply onto surrounding muscles will also change.

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An unusual pattern among the scaling laws in nature is that the fastest animals are neither the largest, nor the smallest, but rather intermediately sized. Because of the enormous diversity in animal shape, the mechanisms underlying this have long been difficult to determine. To address this, we challenge predictive human musculoskeletal simulations, scaled in mass from the size of a mouse (0.

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The gender gap in STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics) is among the widest across education and professional fields, with an underrepresentation of girls and women, particularly in engineering and biomechanics. This issue begins early in education and worsens as females progress into more senior roles. To address this gap, we designed and implemented the Biomechanics Research and Innovation Challenge (BRInC), a 100-day STEM program focused on mentoring and role modelling to engage high school girls and early-career biomechanists at key phases where they most commonly disengage in STEM.

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Wearable robotic exoskeletons designed to assist human movement should integrate with the neuromusculoskeletal system. This means assisting movement while not perturbing motor control. We sought to test if passive ankle exoskeletons, which have been shown to successfully assist human gait, affect neuromuscular control of an exaggerated anterior-posterior standing sway task.

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Tendon xanthoma and altered mechanical properties have been demonstrated in people with familial hypercholesterolaemia. However, it is unclear whether mild, untreated hypercholesterolaemia alters musculotendinous mechanical properties and muscle architecture. We conducted a case-control study of adults aged 50 years and over, without lower limb injury or history of statin medication.

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Article Synopsis
  • Animal performance affects behavior, ecology, and evolution, typically varying with size, except for maximum running speed, which peaks at intermediate sizes.
  • This unique size-performance relationship is influenced by two musculoskeletal constraints: kinetic energy capacity in small animals and work capacity in larger ones.
  • The physiological similarity index (Γ) helps understand locomotor performance across species and suggests new ways to study animal adaptations by moving beyond traditional geometric similarity assumptions.
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Biomechanics as a discipline is ideally placed to increase awareness and participation of girls and women in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics. A nationwide Biomechanics and Research Innovation Challenge (BRInC) centered on mentoring and role modeling was developed to engage high school girls (mentees) and early-mid-career women (mentors) in the field of biomechanics through the completion of a 100-day research and/or innovation project. This manuscript describes the development, implementation, and uptake of the inaugural BRInC program and synthesizes the research and innovation projects undertaken, providing a framework for adoption of this program within the global biomechanics community.

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Spring-based passive ankle exoskeletons have been designed to emulate the energy conservation and power amplification roles of biological muscle-tendon units during locomotion. Yet, it remains unknown if similar assistive devices can serve the other elastomechanical role of biological muscle-tendon units - power attenuation. Here we explored the effect of bilateral passive ankle exoskeletons on neuromuscular control and muscle fascicle dynamics in the ankle plantarflexors during rapid, unexpected vertical perturbations.

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Over the past 50 years our understanding of the central role that muscle motion has in powering movement has accelerated significantly. Fundamental to this progress has been the development of methods for measuring the length of muscles and muscle fibers in vivo. A measurement of muscle fiber length might seem a trivial piece of information on its own.

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We aimed to determine whether the neural control of the biarticular gastrocnemius medialis (GM) and lateralis (GL) muscles is joint-specific, that is, whether their control differs between isolated knee flexion and ankle plantar flexion tasks. Twenty-one male participants performed isometric knee flexion and ankle plantar flexion tasks while we recorded high-density surface electromyography (HDsEMG). First, we estimated the distribution of activation both within- and between muscles using two complementary approaches: surface EMG amplitude and motor unit activity identified from HDsEMG decomposition.

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Skeletal muscle is the engine that powers what is arguably the most essential and defining feature of human and animal life-locomotion. Muscles function to change length and produce force to enable movement, posture, and balance. Despite this seemingly simple role, skeletal muscle displays a variety of phenomena that still remain poorly understood.

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Skeletal muscles bulge when they contract. These three-dimensional shape changes, coupled with fiber rotation, influence a muscle's mechanical performance by uncoupling fiber velocity from muscle belly velocity (i.e.

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Among terrestrial mammals, the largest, the 3 tonne African elephant, is one-million times heavier than the smallest, the 3 g pygmy shrew. Body mass is the most obvious and arguably the most fundamental characteristic of an animal, impacting many important attributes of its life history and biology. Although evolution may guide animals to different sizes, shapes, energetic profiles or ecological niches, it is the laws of physics that limit biological processes and, in turn, affect how animals interact with their environment.

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Passive elastic ankle exoskeletons have been used to augment locomotor performance during walking, running and hopping. In this study, we aimed to determine how these passive devices influence lower limb joint and whole-body mechanical energetics to maintain stable upright hopping during rapid, unexpected perturbations. We recorded lower limb kinematics and kinetics while participants hopped with exoskeleton assistance (0, 76 and 91 Nm rad) on elevated platforms (15 and 20 cm) which were rapidly removed at an unknown time.

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The study of muscle coordination requires knowledge of the force produced by individual muscles, which can be estimated using Hill-type models. Predicted forces from Hill-type models are sensitive to the muscle's maximal force-generating capacity (F), however, to our knowledge, no study has investigated the effect of different F personalization methods on predicted muscle forces. The aim of this study was to determine the influence of two personalization methods on predicted force-sharing strategies between the human gastrocnemii during walking.

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A considerable biomechanical challenge faces larger terrestrial animals as the demands of body support scale with body mass (Mb), while muscle force capacity is proportional to muscle cross-sectional area, which scales with Mb2/3. How muscles adjust to this challenge might be best understood by examining varanids, which vary by five orders of magnitude in size without substantial changes in posture or body proportions. Muscle mass, fascicle length and physiological cross-sectional area all scale with positive allometry, but it remains unclear, however, how muscles become larger in this clade.

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Background: COVID-positive outpatients may benefit from remote monitoring, but such a program often relies on smartphone apps. This may introduce racial and socio-economic barriers to participation. Offering multiple methods for participation may address these barriers.

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The ability to assess balance is essential to determine a patients ability to mitigate any risk of falling. While current assessment tools exist, they either have limitations in that there is no quantitative data recorded, or that they are impractical for general use in clinical settings. In this work, we aim at assessing balance using single-camera videos.

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When muscles contract and change length, they also bulge in thickness and/or width. These shape changes extend the functional range of skeletal muscle by allowing individual muscle fibres to shorten at different velocities than the whole muscle. Age-related differences in muscle architecture and tissue properties influence how older muscles change shape and architecture during contractions, yet this remains unexplored in active older adults.

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With aging comes reductions in the quality and size of skeletal muscle. These changes influence the force-generating capacity of skeletal muscle and contribute to movement deficits that accompany aging. Although declines in strength remain a significant barrier to mobility in older adults, the association between age-related changes in muscle structure and function remain unresolved.

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Assessment of regional muscle architecture is primarily done through the study of animals, human cadavers, or using b-mode ultrasound imaging. However, there remain several limitations to how well such measurements represent in vivo human whole muscle architecture. In this study, we developed an approach using diffusion tensor imaging and magnetic resonance imaging to quantify muscle fibre lengths in different muscle regions along a muscle's length and width.

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The functional difference between the medial gastrocnemius (MG) and lateral gastrocnemius (LG) during walking in humans has not yet been fully established. Although evidence highlights that the MG is activated more than the LG, the link with potential differences in mechanical behavior between these muscles remains unknown. In this study, we aimed to determine whether differences in activation between the MG and LG translate into different fascicle behavior during walking.

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In our everyday lives, we negotiate complex and unpredictable environments. Yet, much of our knowledge regarding locomotion has come from studies conducted under steady-state conditions. We have previously shown that humans rely on the ankle joint to absorb energy and recover from perturbations; however, the muscle-tendon unit (MTU) behaviour and motor control strategies that accompany these joint-level responses are not yet understood.

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