脚的位置控制是跨物种稳定运动的基础。

IF 9.1 1区 综合性期刊 Q1 MULTIDISCIPLINARY SCIENCES
Antoine De Comite, Nidhi Seethapathi
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引用次数: 0

摘要

尽管不可避免的错误,动物仍能稳定地在环境中导航,而不会进行低效的航向修正。在人类中,这种稳定性是通过调整脚在每一步上的位置来实现的,这样就可以纠正最近的错误。然而,尚不清楚具有不同神经系统和身体力学的动物是否使用这种足部位置控制;多足动物的足部轨迹被认为是典型的速度驱动模式,而不是错误驱动模式。在此,我们提出了一种统一的“前馈-反馈”稳定运动控制结构,将速度驱动和身体状态误差驱动相结合。我们通过挖掘果蝇、小鼠和人类的自然运动变异性,为这种控制结构提供了经验支持,发现纯粹以速度驱动的足部放置的竞争控制结构不受数据支持。这项工作发现了果蝇、小鼠和人类控制足部位置的共同行为特征。我们发现这些特征的关键特征,如它们的紧迫性和集中性,随着不同物种的神经力学体现而变化。例如,与人类相比,更稳定的多足动物表现出更少的紧急控制,控制幅度更低,校正时间尺度更慢。此外,多腿动物表现出模块化的、方向的和特定于腿的控制特征,而人类表现出两条腿的共同特征。总的来说,我们的研究结果提供了跨物种稳定运动的见解,揭示了具有不同神经力学的物种如何实现共同的功能目标:足部放置控制。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Foot placement control underlies stable locomotion across species.

Animals navigate their environment stably without inefficient course corrections despite unavoidable errors. In humans, this stability is achieved by modulating the placement of the foot on each step such that recent errors are corrected. However, it is unknown whether animals with diverse nervous systems and body mechanics use such foot placement control; foot trajectories of many-legged animals are considered to be stereotypical velocity-driven patterns, as opposed to error-driven. Here, we put forth a unified "feedforward-feedback" control structure for stable locomotion that combines velocity-driven and body state error-driven foot placement. We provide empirical support for this control structure across flies, mice, and humans by mining their natural locomotor variability, finding that a competing control structure with purely velocity-driven foot placement is not supported by the data. This work finds shared behavioral signatures of foot placement control in flies, mice, and humans. We find that key characteristics of these signatures, such as their urgency and centralization, vary with neuromechanical embodiment across species. For example, more inherently stable multilegged animals exhibit less urgent control with a lower control magnitude and a slower correction timescale compared to humans. Furthermore, many-legged animals display modular, direction-, and leg-specific control signatures, whereas humans exhibit common signatures across both legs. Overall, our findings provide insight into stable locomotion across species, revealing how species with diverse neuromechanics achieve a shared functional goal: foot placement control.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
19.00
自引率
0.90%
发文量
3575
审稿时长
2.5 months
期刊介绍: The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), a peer-reviewed journal of the National Academy of Sciences (NAS), serves as an authoritative source for high-impact, original research across the biological, physical, and social sciences. With a global scope, the journal welcomes submissions from researchers worldwide, making it an inclusive platform for advancing scientific knowledge.
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