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Coupling effect analysis between the central nervous system and the CPG network with proprioception

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 April 2014

Bin He*
Affiliation:
College of Electronics and Information Engineering, Tongji University, Shanghai, 201804, China
Qiang Lu
Affiliation:
College of Electronics and Information Engineering, Tongji University, Shanghai, 201804, China College of Information and Engineering, Taishan Medical University, Taian, 271016, China
Zhipeng Wang
Affiliation:
College of Electronics and Information Engineering, Tongji University, Shanghai, 201804, China
*
*Corresponding author. E-mail: hebin@tongji.edu.cn

Summary

Human rhythmic movement is generated by central pattern generators (CPGs), and their application to robot control has attracted interest of many scientists. But the coupling relationship between the central nervous system and the CPG network with external inputs is still not unveiled. According to biological experiment results, the CPG network is controlled by the neural system; in other words, the interaction between the central nervous system and the CPG network can control human movement effectively. This paper offers a complex human locomotion model, which illustrates the coupling relationship between the central nervous system and the CPG network with proprioception. Based on Matsuoka's CPG model (K. Matsuoka, Biol. Cybern. 52(6), 367–376 (1985)), the stability and robustness of the CPG network are analyzed with external inputs. In order to simulate the coupling relationship, the Radial Basis Function (RBF) neural network is used to simulate the cerebral cortex, and the Credit-Assignment Cerebellar Model Articulation Controller algorithm is employed to realize the locomotion mode conversion. A seven-link biped robot is chosen to simulate the walking gait. The main discoveries include: (1) the output of a new CPG network, which is stable and robust, can be treated as proprioception. Proprioception provides the central nervous system with the information about all joint angles; (2) analysis on a new locomotion model reveals that the cerebral cortex can modulate CPG parameters, leading to adjustment in walking gait.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2014 

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