论文标题
附属协调中的随机性有助于艰苦的地面自我
Randomness in appendage coordination facilitates strenuous ground self-righting
论文作者
论文摘要
随机性在生物学和人工系统中很常见,这是由于环境的随机性或生物体或设备本身的噪声而产生的。在运动控制中,通常认为随机性是一种滋扰。例如,在动态行走过程中,随机地形的随机性会导致亚稳态动力学,必须减轻稳定系统围绕极限周期的稳定。在这里,我们研究了运动中的随机性是否对剧烈的运动任务有益。我们的研究使用了在蟑螂中观察到的剧烈,腿辅助,有翼的地面自构的机器人模拟建模,其中翅膀和腿部运动中存在异常大的随机性。我们开发了一个简化的模拟机器人,能够产生相似的自我impling行为,并在机翼协调中改变了随机性水平。在每个机翼打开尝试中,越随意性增加了机翼打开和腿部摆动之间的时间延迟,在有限的时间内,天真的机器人(不知道最好的协调能力)的可能性就越大。以机翼和腿部振荡之间的相测量的机翼腿协调对自我imply的结果产生了至关重要的影响。没有随机性,周期性的机翼和腿部振荡通常会限制系统访问几个不良阶段,从而导致未能逃离亚稳态。由于随机性,该系统彻底探索了阶段,并有更大的机会遇到良好的阶段以自我权利。我们的研究通过证明随机性有助于使运动系统被困在不希望的亚稳态状态下,这是一种稳定的稳定性,这是一种剧烈运动常见的情况。
Randomness is common in biological and artificial systems, resulting either from stochasticity of the environment or noise in organisms or devices themselves. In locomotor control, randomness is typically considered a nuisance. For example, during dynamic walking, randomness in stochastic terrain leads to metastable dynamics, which must be mitigated to stabilize the system around limit cycles. Here, we studied whether randomness in motion is beneficial for strenuous locomotor tasks. Our study used robotic simulation modeling of strenuous, leg-assisted, winged ground self-righting observed in cockroaches, in which unusually large randomness in wing and leg motions is present. We developed a simplified simulation robot capable of generating similar self-righting behavior and varied the randomness level in wing-leg coordination. During each wing opening attempt, the more randomness added to the time delay between wing opening and leg swinging, the more likely it was for the naive robot (which did not know what coordination is best) to self-right within a finite time. Wing-leg coordination, measured by the phase between wing and leg oscillations, had a crucial impact on self-righting outcome. Without randomness, periodic wing and leg oscillations often limited the system to visit a few bad phases, leading to failure to escape from the metastable state. With randomness, the system explored phases thoroughly and had a better chance of encountering good phases to self-right. Our study complements previous work by demonstrating that randomness helps destabilize locomotor systems from being trapped in undesired metastable states, a situation common in strenuous locomotion.