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An approach for developing an experimentally based model for simulating flight-phase dynamics
Authors:Requejo Philip S  McNitt-Gray Jill L  Flashner Henryk
Affiliation:(1) Department of Kinesiology, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA 90089-0652, USA, US;(2) Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA 90089-1451, USA, US;(3) Department of Aerospace and Mechanical Engineering, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA 90089-1453, USA, US
Abstract: This paper presents an approach for developing an experimentally validated dynamic multisegment model to simulate human flight-phase dynamics and multijoint control. Modeling and experimental techniques were integrated to systematically examine the contribution of multiple error sources to the accuracy of the model and to determine the complexity of a model that adequately emulates the dynamic behavior at the total-body and multijoint levels during flight. The accuracy of the model and of the experimental data was assessed using an inverse dynamics simulation of flight-phase motion for two representative cases: (i) a physical model released from a bar and (ii) a gymnast performing a layout dismount from a bar. Multijoint models with varying numbers of segments were assessed in order to determine the complexity of the model that adequately simulates the flight-phase task. A five-segment model was found to adequately simulate the layout dismount performed by the gymnast. The error introduced during modeling and digitizing contributed to an apparent violation of the conservation law manifested as large external forces acting on the nonactuated joints. These results demonstrate the need to reduce sources of error prior to testing hypotheses regarding feedforward and feedback components of the multijoint control system. The proposed approach for quantifying sources of error provides a crucial step that is required in the development of experimentally based dynamic models designed to examine and test hypotheses regarding multijoint control logic. Received: 5 April 2001 / Accepted in revised form: 25 April 2002 Acknowledgements. This work was funded by Intel, a dissertation awarded from the International Society of Biomechanics, the Internationale Federation de Gymnastique, the International Olympic Committee, and Pfizer. We express our special thanks to Kathleen Costa and Witaya Mathiyakom for their assistance in data collection. Correspondence to: P. S. Requejo (e-mail: requejo@rcf.usc.edu)
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