From Behavior to Bio-Inspiration: Aerial Reorientation and Multi-Plane Stability in Kangaroo Rats, Computational Models, and Robots.

IF 2.2 3区 生物学 Q1 ZOOLOGY Integrative and Comparative Biology Pub Date : 2024-09-27 DOI:10.1093/icb/icae079
Xiangyu Chu, M Janneke Schwaner, Jiajun An, Shengzhi Wang, Craig P McGowan, Kwok Wai Samuel Au
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Abstract

Tails play essential roles in functions related to locomotor stability and maneuverability among terrestrial and arboreal animals. In kangaroo rats, bipedal hopping rodents, tails are used as effective inertial appendages for stability in hopping, but also facilitate stability and maneuverability during predator escape leaps. The complexity of tail functionality shows great potential for bio-inspiration and robotic device design, as maneuvering is accomplished by a long and light-weight inertial appendage. To (1) further understand the mechanics of how kangaroo rats use their tails during aerial maneuvers and (2) explore if we can achieve this behavior with a simplified tail-like appendage (i.e., template), we combined quantified animal observations, computational simulations, and experiments with a two degrees of freedom (2-DoF) tailed robot. We used video data from free-ranging kangaroo rats escaping from a simulated predator and analyzed body and tail motion for the airborne phase. To explain tail contributions to body orientation (i.e., spatial reorientation), we built a mid-air kangaroo rat computational model and demonstrated that the three-dimensional body orientation of the model can be controlled by a simplified 2-DoF tail with a nonlinear control strategy. Resulting simulated trajectories show movement patterns similar to those observed in kangaroo rats. Our robot experiments show that a lightweight tail can generate a large yaw displacement and stabilize pitch and roll angles to zero simultaneously. Our work contributes to better understanding of the form-function relationship of the kangaroo rat tail and lays out an important foundation for bio-inspiration in robotic devices that have lightweight tail-like appendages for mid-air maneuvering.

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从行为到生物灵感:袋鼠、计算模型和机器人的空中重新定向和多平面稳定性。
尾巴在陆生和树栖动物的运动稳定性和机动性方面发挥着重要作用。袋鼠是一种两足跳跃啮齿动物,尾巴被用作有效的惯性附属物,不仅能在跳跃时保持稳定,还能在捕食者逃跑时提高稳定性和机动性。尾巴功能的复杂性为生物启发和机器人装置设计提供了巨大的潜力,因为操纵是由一根长而轻的惯性附属物完成的。为了(i)进一步了解袋鼠在空中机动时如何使用尾巴的力学原理,以及(ii)探索我们是否可以通过简化的类似尾巴的附肢(即模板)来实现这种行为,我们结合了量化动物观察、计算模拟以及双自由度(2-DoF)尾巴机器人实验。我们利用自由活动的袋鼠逃离模拟捕食者的视频数据,分析了空中阶段的身体和尾巴运动。为了解释尾巴对身体定向(即空间重新定向)的贡献,我们建立了一个空中袋鼠计算模型,并证明该模型的三维身体定向可由简化的 2-DoF 尾部以非线性控制策略进行控制。模拟结果显示的运动轨迹与袋鼠的运动轨迹相似。我们的机器人实验表明,轻型尾翼可以产生较大的偏航位移,并同时将俯仰角和滚动角稳定为零。我们的工作有助于更好地理解袋鼠尾巴的形态-功能关系,并为机器人设备的生物启发奠定了重要基础,这种机器人设备具有轻巧的类似尾巴的附属装置,可在半空中进行机动操作。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.70
自引率
7.70%
发文量
150
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Integrative and Comparative Biology ( ICB ), formerly American Zoologist , is one of the most highly respected and cited journals in the field of biology. The journal''s primary focus is to integrate the varying disciplines in this broad field, while maintaining the highest scientific quality. ICB''s peer-reviewed symposia provide first class syntheses of the top research in a field. ICB also publishes book reviews, reports, and special bulletins.
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