SEPOY.net
No Result
View All Result
Saturday, July 19, 2025
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Health
  • Tech
  • Lifestyle
  • Economy
  • Crypto
  • Travel
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Health
  • Tech
  • Lifestyle
  • Economy
  • Crypto
  • Travel
No Result
View All Result
SEPOY.NET
No Result
View All Result
Home Health

Multi-legged walking can be much simpler than previously thought

Nicholas by Nicholas
September 6, 2022
in Health
0

The physics of walking for multi-legged animals and robots is simpler than previously thought. That is the finding described by a team of roboticists, physicists and biologists in the Sept. 5 issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, in a paper titled “Walking is like slithering: a unifying, data-driven view of locomotion.”

READ ALSO

Hypertensive disorders in pregnancy linked to lower breastfeeding rates

Ancient viral DNA found to regulate human gene expression

This is important because it will allow roboticists to build much simpler models to describe the way robots walk and move through the world.”


Nick Gravish, paper coauthor, faculty member, Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, University of California San Diego

The researchers had previously studied ant walking and wanted to see how their findings could be applied to robots. In the process, they discovered a new mathematical relationship between walking, skipping, slithering and swimming in viscous fluids for multi-legged animals and bots.

The team studied several colonies of Argentine ants at UC San Diego, and two different types of multi-legged robots at the University of Michigan.

“Argentine ants are very easy to study in the lab,” said paper coauthor Glenna Clifton, a faculty member at the University of Portland, who conducted most of the ant research while she was a postdoctoral scholar in Gravish’s lab at UC San Diego.

Argentine ants are good walkers that can go long distances over various terrains. These ants also easily acclimate to lab settings, rebuilding their colonies quickly. Researchers then can motivate them to walk by placing food in specific locations. “These ants will set up foraging trails and follow them,” Clifton said. “They bounce back quickly and they don’t hold a grudge.”

To study these different animals and robots, researchers used an algorithm developed by the research group of Shai Revzen at the University of Michigan, which turns complex body motions into shapes. “This algorithm allows us to create a simple relationship between what posture you’re in and where you are going to move next,” Gravish said.

The researchers found that the same algorithms could be applied both to ants and the two different types of robots in the study, even though the amount of slipping motions when they walk differs widely. Argentine ants also don’t slip much when they walk – just 4.7% of total motion. By contrast, that slipping percentage is 12% to 22% for the six-legged BigANT robot and 40% to 100% for the multipod robots with six to 12 legs in the study, which sometimes crawl.

By using this model, researchers can predict where the insect or robot is going to move next simply based on what posture–or shape–they’re making. “This provides a universal model for location that applies whenever the movement is dominated by friction with the environment,” the researchers write.

The mathematics the researchers used aren’t new. But the math was understood to only apply to slithering and swimming in viscous liquids. The team showed that the same equations apply to multi-legged walking, whether the walkers are slipping or not. In addition, the same rules apply from millimeter-scale insects, such as ants, to meter-scale robots. An early version of the paper title was “walking like a worm.”

“The universality of this approach may have applications in robot design and motion planning, and provides insight into the evolution and control of legged locomotion,” the researchers write.

Researchers hypothesize that these universal principles may have implications for understanding major evolutionary transitions, for example from swimming to walking. Given that walking, even with slipping, follows the same general control principles as viscous swimming, early land animals might already have had the neural circuitry needed for locomotion on land.

Researchers didn’t study two-legged creatures, but the model would apply to them as long as they move slowly; have both feet on the ground at the same time; and do not fall. (Picture Michael Jackson doing the moonwalk.)

The team still has more fine tuning to do, to understand, for example, the role friction forces play in the model.

“Either way, walking can be much simpler than we usually think,” Gravish said.

Source:

University of California San Diego

Tags: PostureResearchSwimmingWalking

Related Posts

Hypertensive disorders in pregnancy linked to lower breastfeeding rates
Health

Hypertensive disorders in pregnancy linked to lower breastfeeding rates

July 19, 2025
Ancient viral DNA found to regulate human gene expression
Health

Ancient viral DNA found to regulate human gene expression

July 19, 2025
Study reveals complex patterns of burden and survival among people with digestive system cancers in China
Health

Study reveals complex patterns of burden and survival among people with digestive system cancers in China

July 18, 2025
Cuproptosis offers new hope for treating inflammatory bowel disease and colorectal cancer
Health

Cuproptosis offers new hope for treating inflammatory bowel disease and colorectal cancer

July 18, 2025
New mRNA vaccine strategy awakens immune system to fight cancer
Health

New mRNA vaccine strategy awakens immune system to fight cancer

July 18, 2025
Acorn-based coffee boosts antioxidants with minimal health risk
Health

Acorn-based coffee boosts antioxidants with minimal health risk

July 18, 2025
Next Post

Myocarditis cases among young males after COVID-19 vaccines remain rare and mild, study finds

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

About

Sepoy.net is a perfect place for people who want daily updates on news related to business, technology, entertainment, health, cryptocurrency etc.

Contact: hello@sepoy.net

Major Categories

News

Business

Tech

Economy

 

Recent Posts

  • Eagles gambling enterprise Unibet Wings Reputation Guidance Paddy Opportunity fifty free spins 9 pots of gold no deposit zero-deposit free revolves by the Gambling Region
  • Mr Cashman Slot casino euro palace $100 free spins Games Try this Totally free Demo Version
  • Deal if any Offer Online Position Try for 100 percent free otherwise Gamble for real Currency

Pages

  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Disclaimer
  • DMCA
  • Home
  • Privacy Policy

© 2023 Sepoy.net

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Business
  • News
  • Health
  • Tech
  • Science
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel

© 2023 Sepoy.net