Title of article :
Evaluating alternative gait strategies using evolutionary
robotics
Author/Authors :
William I. Sellers، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Abstract :
Evolutionary robotics is a branch of artificial intelligence concerned with the automatic generation of autonomous
robots. Usually the form of the robot is predefined and various computational techniques are used to control the
machine’s behaviour. One aspect is the spontaneous generation of walking in legged robots and this can be used
to investigate the mechanical requirements for efficient walking in bipeds. This paper demonstrates a bipedal
simulator that spontaneously generates walking and running gaits. The model can be customized to represent a
range of hominoid morphologies and used to predict performance parameters such as preferred speed and metabolic
energy cost. Because it does not require any motion capture data it is particularly suitable for investigating locomotion
in fossil animals. The predictions for modern humans are highly accurate in terms of energy cost for a given
speed and thus the values predicted for other bipeds are likely to be good estimates. To illustrate this the cost of
transport is calculated for
Australopithecus afarensis
. The model allows the degree of maximum extension at
the knee to be varied causing the model to adopt walking gaits varying from chimpanzee-like to human-like.
The energy costs associated with these gait choices can thus be calculated and this information used to evaluate
possible locomotor strategies in early hominids
Keywords :
Evolutionary computing , Bipedalism , Biomechanics , Locomotion
Journal title :
Journal of Anatomy Wily
Journal title :
Journal of Anatomy Wily