Hill-type muscle models are widely used within the field of biomechanics to predict and understand muscle behaviour, and are often essential where muscle forces cannot be directly measured. However, these models have limited accuracy, particularly during cyclic contractions at the submaximal levels of activation that typically occur during locomotion. To address this issue, recent studies have incorporated effects into Hill-type models that are oftentimes neglected, such as size-dependent, history-dependent, and activation-dependent effects. However, the contribution of these effects on muscle performance has yet to be evaluated under common contractile conditions that reflect the range of activations, strains, and strain rates that occur i...
Hill-type models are ubiquitous in the field of biomechanics, providing estimates of a muscle's forc...
The presented chemo-electro-mechanical skeletal muscle model relies on a continuum-mechanical formul...
In muscle and movement modelling it is almost invariably assumed that force actually exerted is dete...
Skeletal muscle is the engine that produces force to power movement in humans and animals alike. To ...
It is state of the art that muscle contraction dynamics is adequately described by a hyperbolic rela...
AbstractMuscles contain a collection of motor units that can have different mechanical properties. I...
A Hill type model which incorporates the effects of the activation, elasticity, and prehistory durin...
In order to perform external work, muscles must do additional internal work to deform their tissue, ...
We review here the use and reliability of Hill-type muscle models to predict muscle performance unde...
Copyright © 2012 Michael Günther et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Creati...
The main objective of the study was to investigate skeletal muscle force production during isometric...
Muscle is a type of tissue able to contract and, thus, shorten, producing a pulling force able to g...
Skeletal muscles are the motors that drive human and animal locomotion. Yet despite their fundamenta...
This article attempts to identify the key aspects of sarcomere inhomogeneity and the dynamics of sar...
Muscle contraction is an essential biological process than spans physiological size scales, ranging ...
Hill-type models are ubiquitous in the field of biomechanics, providing estimates of a muscle's forc...
The presented chemo-electro-mechanical skeletal muscle model relies on a continuum-mechanical formul...
In muscle and movement modelling it is almost invariably assumed that force actually exerted is dete...
Skeletal muscle is the engine that produces force to power movement in humans and animals alike. To ...
It is state of the art that muscle contraction dynamics is adequately described by a hyperbolic rela...
AbstractMuscles contain a collection of motor units that can have different mechanical properties. I...
A Hill type model which incorporates the effects of the activation, elasticity, and prehistory durin...
In order to perform external work, muscles must do additional internal work to deform their tissue, ...
We review here the use and reliability of Hill-type muscle models to predict muscle performance unde...
Copyright © 2012 Michael Günther et al. This is an open access article distributed under the Creati...
The main objective of the study was to investigate skeletal muscle force production during isometric...
Muscle is a type of tissue able to contract and, thus, shorten, producing a pulling force able to g...
Skeletal muscles are the motors that drive human and animal locomotion. Yet despite their fundamenta...
This article attempts to identify the key aspects of sarcomere inhomogeneity and the dynamics of sar...
Muscle contraction is an essential biological process than spans physiological size scales, ranging ...
Hill-type models are ubiquitous in the field of biomechanics, providing estimates of a muscle's forc...
The presented chemo-electro-mechanical skeletal muscle model relies on a continuum-mechanical formul...
In muscle and movement modelling it is almost invariably assumed that force actually exerted is dete...