Publications by authors named "W M Kier"

Article Synopsis
  • - Muscular hydrostats, like octopus arms and elephant trunks, lack bones, granting them extraordinary flexibility and the ability to reshape themselves effectively.
  • - The arrangement of muscle fibers in these structures acts like a complex mechanical program that helps control intricate shapes and movements.
  • - Research combining imaging, biomechanics, and simulations led to the creation of an octopus-inspired arm with 200 muscle groups, showcasing innovative design and control principles relevant to robotics that allow for simple yet effective manipulation across various tasks.
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Squid use eight arms and two slender tentacles to capture prey. The muscular stalks of the tentacles are elongated approximately 80% in 20-40 ms towards the prey, which is adhered to the terminal clubs by arrays of suckers. Using a previously developed forward dynamics model of the extension of the tentacles of the squid (formerly ), we predict how spatial muscle-activation patterns result in a distribution of muscular power, muscle work, and kinetic and elastic energy along the tentacle.

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Obliquely striated muscles occur in 17+ phyla, likely evolving repeatedly, yet the implications of oblique striation for muscle function are unknown. Contrary to the belief that oblique striation allows high force output over extraordinary length ranges (i.e.

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Counterillumination, the masking of an animal's silhouette with ventral photophores, is found in a number of mesopelagic taxa but is difficult to employ because it requires that the animal match the intensity of downwelling light without seeing its own ventral photophores. It has been proposed that the myctophid, uses a photophore directed towards the eye, termed an eye-facing photophore, as a reference standard that it adjusts to match downwelling light. The potential use of this mechanism, however, has not been evaluated in other fishes.

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