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Evaluating the energetics of entrainment in a human-machine coupled oscillator system. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Humans can synchronize their walking patterns to external forces, like swaying bridges or vibrating treadmills, but the impact of this synchronization on energy consumption has been unclear.
  • Researchers explored whether walking in sync with vertical force oscillations reduced the energy used during movement.
  • Although the study found no significant drop in metabolic costs, individuals did use less energy when the oscillation helped their movement, suggesting that people may adapt their gait based on mechanical feedback from their environment for better stability and predictability rather than solely for energy efficiency.

Article Abstract

During locomotion, humans sometimes entrain (i.e. synchronize) their steps to external oscillations: e.g. swaying bridges, tandem walking, bouncy harnesses, vibrating treadmills, exoskeletons. Previous studies have discussed the role of nonlinear oscillators (e.g. central pattern generators) in facilitating entrainment. However, the energetics of such interactions are unknown. Given substantial evidence that humans prioritize economy during locomotion, we tested whether reduced metabolic expenditure is associated with human entrainment to vertical force oscillations, where frequency and amplitude were prescribed via a custom mechatronics system during walking. Although metabolic cost was not significantly reduced during entrainment, individuals expended less energy when the oscillation forces did net positive work on the body and roughly selected phase relationships that maximize positive work. It is possible that individuals use mechanical cues to infer energy cost and inform effective gait strategies. If so, an accurate prediction may rely on the relative stability of interactions with the environment. Our results suggest that entrainment occurs over a wide range of oscillation parameters, though not as a direct priority for minimizing metabolic cost. Instead, entrainment may act to stabilize interactions with the environment, thus increasing predictability for the effective implementation of internal models that guide energy minimization.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8338938PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-95047-xDOI Listing

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