Motion Analysis of Passive Biped Walking System with Upper body

Author(s):  
Hideo Fujimoto ◽  
Akihito Sano ◽  
Yoshito Ikemata
Measurement ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 149 ◽  
pp. 107024 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ryan Sers ◽  
Steph Forrester ◽  
Esther Moss ◽  
Stephen Ward ◽  
Jianjia Ma ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 2019 (0) ◽  
pp. 131
Author(s):  
Kimiya HORI ◽  
Kenichiro MATSUZAKI ◽  
Keisuke YONEKURA

Author(s):  
Ekta Kapri ◽  
Manju Mehta ◽  
Kiran S

This review article summarized the literature regarding running gait. It describes characteristics of running gait and running gait cycle, explains running anatomy in relation to lower and upper body mechanism; contribution of muscles, and joint running gait cycle. The concept of running kinematics and kinetics has described motion characteristics such as position, velocity, acceleration, and force applied during the running cycle. Running gait analysis techniques has discussed such as motion analysis, force plate analysis, and electromyography.


Author(s):  
Varun Joshi ◽  
Manoj Srinivasan

Understanding how humans walk on a surface that can move might provide insights into, for instance, whether walking humans prioritize energy use or stability. Here, motivated by the famous human-driven oscillations observed in the London Millennium Bridge, we introduce a minimal mathematical model of a biped, walking on a platform (bridge or treadmill) capable of lateral movement. This biped model consists of a point-mass upper body with legs that can exert force and perform mechanical work on the upper body. Using numerical optimization, we obtain energy-optimal walking motions for this biped, deriving the periodic body and platform motions that minimize a simple metabolic energy cost. When the platform has an externally imposed sinusoidal displacement of appropriate frequency and amplitude, we predict that body motion entrained to platform motion consumes less energy than walking on a fixed surface. When the platform has finite inertia, a mass- spring-damper with similar parameters to the Millennium Bridge, we show that the optimal biped walking motion sustains a large lateral platform oscillation when sufficiently many people walk on the bridge. Here, the biped model reduces walking metabolic cost by storing and recovering energy from the platform, demonstrating energy benefits for two features observed for walking on the Millennium Bridge: crowd synchrony and large lateral oscillations.


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