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Muscle contraction history: modified Hill versus an exponential decay model
Authors:Gertjan J. C. Ettema  Kenneth Meijer
Affiliation:(1)  Department of Anatomical Sciences, The University of Queensland, Australia, AU;(2)  Department of Sport Sciences, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, 7034 Trondheim, Norway, NO;(3)  Department of Integrative Biology, VLSB 3060, UC Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720-3140, USA, US
Abstract:In recent years, it has been recognised that improvements to classic models of muscle mechanical behaviour are often necessary for properly modelling co-ordinated multi-joint actions. In this respect, the purpose of the present study was to improve on modelling stretch-induced force enhancement and shortening-induced force depression of muscle contraction. For this purpose, two models were used: a modified Hill model and a model based loosely on mechano-chemistry of the cross-bridge cycle (exponential decay model). The models were compared with a classic Hill model and experimental data. Parameter values were based, as much as possible, on experimental findings in the literature, and tested with new experiments on the gastrocnemius of the rat. Both models describe many features of slow-ramp movements well during short contractions (300–500 ms), but long-duration behaviour is described only partly. The exponential decay model does not incorporate a force–velocity curve. Therefore, its good performance indicates that the status of the classic force–velocity characteristic may have to be reconsidered. Like movement-induced force depression and enhancement, it seems a particular manifestation of time-dependent force behaviour of muscle, rather than a fundamental property of muscle (like the length–tension curve). It is argued that a combination of the exponential decay model (or other models based on the mechano-chemistry of contraction) and structurally based models may be fruitful in explaining this time-dependent contraction behaviour. Furthermore, not in the least because of its relative simplicity, the exponential decay model may prove more suitable for modelling multi-joint movements than the Hill model. Received: 19 March 1999 / Accepted in revised form: 9 June 2000
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