Morphological Computation Increases From Lower- to Higher-Level of Biological Motor Control Hierarchy

Haeufle, Daniel F. B. and Stollenmaier, Katrin and Heinrich, Isabelle and Schmitt, Syn and Ghazi-Zahedi, Keyan (2020) Morphological Computation Increases From Lower- to Higher-Level of Biological Motor Control Hierarchy. Frontiers in Robotics and AI, 7. ISSN 2296-9144

[thumbnail of pubmed-zip/versions/1/package-entries/frobt-07-511265/frobt-07-511265.pdf] Text
pubmed-zip/versions/1/package-entries/frobt-07-511265/frobt-07-511265.pdf - Published Version

Download (2MB)

Abstract

Voluntary movements, like point-to-point or oscillatory human arm movements, are generated by the interaction of several structures. High-level neuronal circuits in the brain are responsible for planning and initiating a movement. Spinal circuits incorporate proprioceptive feedback to compensate for deviations from the desired movement. Muscle biochemistry and contraction dynamics generate movement driving forces and provide an immediate physical response to external forces, like a low-level decentralized controller. A simple central neuronal command like “initiate a movement” then recruits all these biological structures and processes leading to complex behavior, e.g., generate a stable oscillatory movement in resonance with an external spring-mass system. It has been discussed that the spinal feedback circuits, the biochemical processes, and the biomechanical muscle dynamics contribute to the movement generation, and, thus, take over some parts of the movement generation and stabilization which would otherwise have to be performed by the high-level controller. This contribution is termed morphological computation and can be quantified with information entropy-based approaches. However, it is unknown whether morphological computation actually differs between these different hierarchical levels of the control system. To investigate this, we simulated point-to-point and oscillatory human arm movements with a neuro-musculoskeletal model. We then quantify morphological computation on the different hierarchy levels. The results show that morphological computation is highest for the most central (highest) level of the modeled control hierarchy, where the movement initiation and timing are encoded. Furthermore, they show that the lowest neuronal control layer, the muscle stimulation input, exploits the morphological computation of the biochemical and biophysical muscle characteristics to generate smooth dynamic movements. This study provides evidence that the system's design in the mechanical as well as in the neurological structure can take over important contributions to control, which would otherwise need to be performed by the higher control levels.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Middle East Library > Mathematical Science
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@middle-eastlibrary.com
Date Deposited: 29 Jun 2023 05:08
Last Modified: 07 Sep 2024 10:39
URI: http://editor.openaccessbook.com/id/eprint/1232

Actions (login required)

View Item
View Item