<p>âThe book is well and balanced writing.â (Andrey Zahariev, zbMATH 1484.92001, 2022)</p>
This book demonstrates how delay differential equations (DDEs) can be used to compliment the laboratory investigation of human balancing tasks. This approach is made accessible to non-specialists by comparing mathematical predictions and experimental observations. For example, the observation that a longer pole is easier to balance on a fingertip than a shorter one demonstrates the essential role played by a time delay in the balance control mechanism. Another balancing task considered is postural sway during quiet standing. With the inverted pendulum as the driver and the feedback control depending on state variables or on an internal model, the feedback can be identified by determining a critical pendulum length and/or a critical delay. This approach is used to identify the nature of the feedback for the pole balancing and postural sway examples. Motivated by the question of how the nervous system deals with these feedback control challenges, there is a discussion of ââmicrochaoticââ fluctuations in balance control and how robust control can be achieved in the face of uncertainties in the estimation of control parameters. The final chapter suggests some topics for future research.Each chapter includes an abstract and a point-by-point summary of the main concepts that have been established. A particularly useful numerical integration method for the DDEs that arise in balance control is semi-discretization. This method is described and a MATLAB template is provided.This book will be a useful source for anyone studying balance in humans, other bipedal organisms and humanoid robots. Much of the material has been used by the authors to teach senior undergraduates in computational neuroscience and students in bio-systems, biomedical, mechanical and neural engineering. Â
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Motivated by the question of how the nervous system deals with these feedback control challenges, there is a discussion of ââmicrochaoticââ fluctuations in balance control and how robust control can be achieved in the face of uncertainties in the estimation of control parameters.
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1. Introduction.- 2. Background.- 3. Pole Balancing at the Fingertip.- 4. Sensory Dead Zones: Switching Feedback.- 5. Microchaos in Balance Control.- 6. Postural Sway During Quiet Standing.- 7. Stability Radii and Uncertainty in Balance Control.- 8. Challenges for the Future.- References.- Semi-discretization Method.- Stability Radii: Some Mathematical Aspects.- Index.
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This book demonstrates how delay differential equations (DDEs) can be used to compliment the laboratory investigation of human balancing tasks. This approach is made accessible to non-specialists by comparing mathematical predictions and experimental observations. For example, the observation that a longer pole is easier to balance on a fingertip than a shorter one demonstrates the essential role played by a time delay in the balance control mechanism. Another balancing task considered is postural sway during quiet standing.Â
With the inverted pendulum as the driver and the feedback control depending on state variables or on an internal model, the feedback can be identified by determining a critical pendulum length and/or a critical delay. This approach is used to identify the nature of the feedback for the pole balancing and postural sway examples. Motivated by the question of how the nervous system deals with these feedback control challenges, there is a discussion ofââmicrochaoticââ fluctuations in balance control and how robust control can be achieved in the face of uncertainties in the estimation of control parameters. The final chapter suggests some topics for future research.
Each chapter includes an abstract and a point-by-point summary of the main concepts that have been established. A particularly useful numerical integration method for the DDEs that arise in balance control is semi-discretization. This method is described and a MATLAB template is provided.
This book will be a useful source for anyone studying balance in humans, other bipedal organisms and humanoid robots. Much of the material has been used by the authors to teach senior undergraduates in computational neuroscience and students in bio-systems, biomedical, mechanical and neural engineering.Â
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Presents mathematical as well as experimental results in each chapter Includes recent developments and first-hand results Provides useful reference for students, researchers and mathematicians associated with control theory
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9783030845810
Publisert
2021-10-19
Utgiver
Vendor
Springer Nature Switzerland AG
Høyde
235 mm
Bredde
155 mm
AldersnivĂĽ
Research, P, 06
SprĂĽk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Biographical note
Tamas Insperger is a professor and chairperson of the Department of Applied Mechanics at the Budapest University of Technology and Economics and the group leader of the MTA-BME LendĂźlet Human Balancing Research group. He is an author with Gabor Stepan of the book âSemi-discretization for time-delay systemsâ.John Milton is a professor of computational neuroscience at The Claremont Colleges. He has authored three books: âMathematics as a Laboratory tool: Dynamics, delays and noiseâ with Toru Ohira, âEpilepsy as a dynamic diseaseâ with Peter Jung and âDynamics of small neural populationsâ.