The American Lobster Homarus americanus is a highly mobile marine decapod, ubiquitous to the benthic environment of the eastern North Atlantic. Lobsters occupy a range of subtidal habitats on the continental shelf, and are capable of navigating through spatially complex boulder fields, as well as coping with variable water currents. Given these competencies, we have adopted the lobster as a design model for a biomimetic autonomous underwater vehicle intended for operation in similar environments. A central motor pattern generator model was developed from electromyographic data from lobsters, and is being implemented on an eight-legged ambulatory vehicle. The vehicle uses Nitinol shape-memory alloy wires as linear actuators, physically modeling the antagonistic muscle pairs of a lobster leg. The contraction of the wires is produced by heating them with an electrical current. This produces a change in the crystalline structure of the material from a martensite to an austenite state, resulting in a 5% contraction of the wire. Three pairs of wires are used around three joints to produce a three-degrees-of-freedom walking leg. Current drivers power the actuators, and pulse-width modulation is used to obtain graded contractions from the muscles. The combination of a biologically based control system coupled with a linear actuator sharing many characteristics of invertebrate muscle tissue has enabled us to construct a biomimetic ambulatory robot sharing some of the competencies of the model.
KEYWORDS: Neurons, Motion models, Systems modeling, Control systems, Animal model studies, Robotics, Mobile robots, Sensors, Resolution enhancement technologies, Gait analysis
Crusteans have been engineered by evolution to adapt and survive in a shallow water hydro- dynamic environment. We have formed a partnership between biology and engineering to explore how crusteans navigate in shallow waters and we are continuing studies to reverse- engineer the biological system. In particular, we are studying the neural control mechanisms of the American lobster, and applying the resultant neurophysiological models to robot control. Our robot is based on a central pattern generation model rather than a reflex chain model of the underlying mechanisms. We have formalized the basic structure of this model in terms of central pattern generators, command, and coordinating systems. The central pattern generator controls the motion of the leg appropriate to walking in all directions with and without sensory feedback. The coordinating system controls the gait pattern of the legs. Proprioceptive reflexes are used to alter the path of a leg due to obstacles and exteroceptive reflexes alter the patterns of several legs to achieve overall motions of the lobster. We have built a simulator which models the central pattern generator and coordination and load compensation. It demonstrates basic walking motions in any direction and at multiple speeds. If additional loads are applied while walking, the neural activity is increased (recruitment) and the leg pattern slows to reflect the additional load. We are currently building an eight legged terrestrial walking machine based on the morphology of the lobster to demonstrate the results of our simulation. In the future we will add more sensors, reflexes, and taxis to our simulator and robot. We plan to implement an underwater version of this robot.
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