It is widely accepted that humans and animals minimize energetic cost while walking. While such principles predict average behavior, they do not explain the variability observed in walking. For robust performance, walking movements must adapt at each step, not just on average. Here, we propose an analytical framework that reconciles issues of optimality, redundancy, and stochasticity. For human treadmill walking, we defined a goal function to formulate a precise mathematical definition of one possible control strategy: maintain constant speed at each stride. We recorded stride times and stride lengths from healthy subjects walking at five speeds. The specified goal function yielded a decomposition of stride-to-stride variations into new gai...
Humans can learn to move optimally. For many movements, we have a control strategy—or control policy...
In this two-part talk, I will first describe our human locomotion experiments and optimization calcu...
Human walking exhibits small variations in both step length and step width, some of which may be rel...
It is widely accepted that humans and animals minimize energetic cost while walking. While such prin...
Jonathan B. Dingwell is with UT Austin, Joby John is with Pennsylvania State University, Joseph P. C...
Variability is ubiquitous in human movement, arising from internal and external noise, inherent biol...
A fundamental question in human motor neuroscience is to determine how the nervous system generates ...
Humans do not generally walk at constant speed, except perhaps on a treadmill. Normal walking involv...
textWalking and running are essential tasks people take for granted every day. However, these are h...
The correlational structure of stride-to-stride fluctuations differs between healthy and pathologica...
Walking humans spontaneously select different speed, frequency, and step length combinations dependi...
To successfully traverse their environment, humans often perform maneuvers to achieve desired task g...
The correlational structure of stride-to-stride fluctuations differs between healthy and pathologica...
The correlational structure of stride-to-stride fluctuations differs between healthy and pathologica...
A fundamental question in human motor neuroscience is to determine how the nervous system generates ...
Humans can learn to move optimally. For many movements, we have a control strategy—or control policy...
In this two-part talk, I will first describe our human locomotion experiments and optimization calcu...
Human walking exhibits small variations in both step length and step width, some of which may be rel...
It is widely accepted that humans and animals minimize energetic cost while walking. While such prin...
Jonathan B. Dingwell is with UT Austin, Joby John is with Pennsylvania State University, Joseph P. C...
Variability is ubiquitous in human movement, arising from internal and external noise, inherent biol...
A fundamental question in human motor neuroscience is to determine how the nervous system generates ...
Humans do not generally walk at constant speed, except perhaps on a treadmill. Normal walking involv...
textWalking and running are essential tasks people take for granted every day. However, these are h...
The correlational structure of stride-to-stride fluctuations differs between healthy and pathologica...
Walking humans spontaneously select different speed, frequency, and step length combinations dependi...
To successfully traverse their environment, humans often perform maneuvers to achieve desired task g...
The correlational structure of stride-to-stride fluctuations differs between healthy and pathologica...
The correlational structure of stride-to-stride fluctuations differs between healthy and pathologica...
A fundamental question in human motor neuroscience is to determine how the nervous system generates ...
Humans can learn to move optimally. For many movements, we have a control strategy—or control policy...
In this two-part talk, I will first describe our human locomotion experiments and optimization calcu...
Human walking exhibits small variations in both step length and step width, some of which may be rel...