Biomechanical Constraints Underlying Motor Primitives Derived from the Musculoskeletal Anatomy of the Human Arm

Abstract

Neural control of movement can only be realized though the interaction between the mechanical properties of the limb and the environment. Thus, a fundamental question is whether anatomy has evolved to simplify neural control by shaping these interactions in a beneficial way. This inductive data-driven study analyzed the patterns of muscle actions across multiple joints using the musculoskeletal model of the human upper limb. This model was used to calculate muscle lengths across the full range of motion of the arm and examined the correlations between these values between all pairs of muscles. Musculoskeletal coupling was quantified using hierarchical clustering analysis. Muscle lengths between multiple pairs of muscles across multiple postures were highly correlated. These correlations broadly formed two proximal and distal groups, where proximal muscles of the arm were correlated with each other and distal muscles of the arm and hand were correlated with each other, but not between groups. Using hierarchical clustering, between 11and 14 reliable muscle groups were identified. This shows that musculoskeletal anatomy does indeed shape the mechanical interactions by grouping muscles into functional clusters that generally match the functional repertoire of the human arm. Together, these results support the idea that the structure of the musculoskeletal system is tuned to solve movement complexity problem by reducing the dimensionality of available solutions.

Open PDF

Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Oct 13, 2016
Accession Number
AD1051911

Entities

People

  • Mathew T. Boots
  • Russell L. Hardesty
  • Sergiy Yakovenko
  • Valeriya Gritsenko

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Space

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Anatomy
  • Arm Bones
  • Biomechanical Phenomena
  • Brain
  • Central Nervous System
  • Coordinate Systems
  • Data Sets
  • Dimensionality Reduction
  • Information Science
  • Joints (Anatomy)
  • Mechanical Properties
  • Musculoskeletal System
  • Nervous System
  • New York
  • Spinal Cord
  • United States
  • West Virginia

Readers

  • Computational Modeling and Simulation
  • Systems Analysis and Design
  • Trauma Surgery or Emergency Medicine.