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Workshop 3: Biomechanics and Neural Control - Muscle, Limb, and Brain (January 14-18, 2008)

Organizers: Art Kuo, Lena Ting, John Guckenheimer, and Anthony Bloch

Biological movement is governed by a complex interplay between the central nervous system and the musculoskeletal system. The nervous system has conventionally been thought to reside atop a hierarchical control system. The periphery was thought to receive motor commands, with the role of integrating, filtering, and acting upon those commands. However, neuroscientists have gathered increasing evidence that supports a more collaborative control structure. Most evident is the importance of feedback loops that provide sensory information not only locally but also from throughout the periphery. Feedforward components to motor control have gradually given way to feedback, where there is no hierarchy. Instead, each system contributes to the overall behavior of a feedback loop. The nervous system receives sensory information, with the role of integrating, filtering, and acting upon that feedback. Recent evidence indicates that an internal representation of body and environment dynamics contributes to sensorimotor integration for state estimation and motor planning.

The collaboration between sensors, actuators, limbs, and neurons is a systems problem. The physiology of these components is increasingly understood in quantitative terms. The dynamics of these components, however, are not well understood, especially when they interact. A systems approach is ideal for studying the organization of the nervous system and its interplay with the musculoskeletal system. It is critical for experts in areas such as muscle physiology, body and limb mechanics, and neurophysiology, to share knowledge, not only in descriptive terms, but also in a mathematical language amenable to a systems approach.

The goal of this workshop is to foster interaction between experts on muscle, limb, and brain. The proposed speakers include pioneers in the use of mathematical tools in biomechanics, as well as state-of-the-art experimentalists whose approaches may not be quantitative but are nonetheless amenable to a systems approach.

Schedule

Monday, January 14
8:00-8:45am Welcome reception with continental breakfast
8:45-9:00am Welcome and introduction: Avner Friedman, Art Kuo, and Lena Ting
What determines muscle's function in movement?
9:00-9:30am Peter A. Huijing: Epimuscular myofascial transmission: Its potential in health and disease
9:30-9:40am Coffee break
9:40-10:10am Sharon R. Bullimore: Can molecular properties be inferred from experiments on whole muscle cells?
10:10-10:30am Coffee break
10:30-11:00am Thomas J. Roberts: Extracellular determinants of muscle mechanical performance during movement
11:00-11:10am Coffee break
11:10-11:45am Glen Lichtwark: Does elastic energy enhance muscle efficiency in the stretch shortening cycle?
11:45-12:15pm Discussion
12:15-2:00pm Lunch break
What biomechanical degrees of freedom does the nervous system control?
2:00-2:30pm Matt Tresch: Low dimensional motor control using muscle synergies to exploit intrinsic dynamics
2:30-2:40pm Coffee break
2:40-3:10pm Lena H. Ting: Emergence of muscle synergies from neural and musculoskeletal constraints
3:10-3:30pm Coffee break
3:30-4:00pm W.Z. Rymer: Control of force generation across multi-degree of freedom joints
4:00-4:10pm Coffee break
4:10-4:45pm Jason Kutch: Force variability as an indicator of neural control dimensionality
4:45-5:15pm Discussion
Tuesday, January 15
Is locomotion a matter of neural control or just mechanics?
9:00-9:30am Andy Ruina: Energetics and optimality of locomotion
9:30-9:40am Coffee break
9:40-10:10am A. J. (Ton) van den Bogert: Is human gait optimal?
10:10-10:30am Coffee break
10:30-11:00am J. Max Donelan: Mechanical determinants of the metabolic cost of healthy and pathological gait
11:00-11:10am Coffee break
11:10-11:45am Art Kuo: Feedback and feedforward control of human locomotion
11:45-12:15pm Discussion
12:15-2:00pm Lunch break
How is stability achieved in musculoskeletal systems?
2:00-2:30pm Andrew A. Biewener: Functional diversification within and between muscle synergists may simplify motor control
2:30-2:40pm Coffee break
2:40-3:10pm A. J. (Knoek) van Soest: Stability of bipedal standing: Stiffness requirements in inverted pendulum models
3:10-3:30pm Coffee break
3:30-4:00pm Robert J. Peterka: Following Occam's razor toward an understanding of human postural control

4:00-4:10pm

Coffee break
4:10-4:45pm Daniel M. Merfeld: The contributions of internal models to the dynamics of vestibular perception and action
4:45-5:15pm Discussion
5:15-5:30pm Coffee and refreshments
5:30-6:30pm Public lecture: Max Donelan, Simon Fraser University
Title: Why Do We Walk the Way We Do?
6:30pm Reception in Jennings Hall, 3rd Floor
Wednesday, January 16
What computations does the nervous system perform for control?
9:00-9:30am John Guckenheimer: Neural dynamics
9:30-9:40am Coffee break
9:40-10:10am Mike Paulin: Dyanimats: Virtual animals for integrative modeling of neural and biomechanical mechanisms underlying agile movement
10:10-10:30am Coffee break
10:30-11:00am Stefan Schaal: Dynamic movement primitives-A bridge between optimal control and pattern generators
11:00-11:10am Coffee break
11:10-11:45am Konrad Koerding: Adapting to a changing body in a changing world
11:45-12:15pm Discussion
12:15-2:00pm Lunch break
Does the nervous system perform optimal control?
2:00-2:30pm Stephen H. Scott: Interpreting primary motor cortex function based on optimal feedback control
2:30-2:40pm Coffee break
2:40-3:10pm Emo Todorov: Stochastic optimal control of biological movement
3:10-3:30pm Coffee break
3:30-4:00pm Kurt A. Thoroughman: Trial-by-trial motor adaptation, elemental neural transformations, and making covert computations overt

4:00-4:10pm

Coffee break
4:10-4:45pm F.A. Mussa-Ivaldi: Adaptive control of force and movement
4:45-5:15pm Discussion
Thursday, January 17
Can musculoskeletal mechanics simplify neural control?
9:00-9:30am Richard L. Lieber: Skeletal muscle design dramatically simplifies motor control strategies
9:30-9:40am Coffee break
9:40-10:10am T. Richard Nichols: How much of motor coordination is mediated by musculoskeletal mechanics?
10:10-10:30am Coffee break
10:30-11:00am Steve L. Lehman: From molecules to muscle: Necessity, and experimental and modeling challenges
11:00-11:10am Coffee break
11:10-11:45am Walter Herzog: On the mechanics of sarcomeres
11:45-12:15pm Discussion
12:15-2:00pm Lunch break
Manipulation: The brain really does something!?
2:00-2:30pm Francisco J. Valero-Cuevas: Towards understanding dexterous manipulation in humans
2:30-2:40pm Coffee break
2:40-3:10pm Robert D. Howe: Why do simple robot grippers work as well as human hands?
3:10-3:30pm Coffee break
3:30-4:00pm Roland S. Johansson: Encoding and use of tactile afferent information in control of object oriented actions

4:00-4:10pm

Coffee break
4:10-4:40pm Discussion
6:00pm Banquet dinner at Holiday Inn on the Lane
Friday, January 18
9:00-9:30am Manoj Srinivasan: Optimal control and legged locomotion
9:30-9:40am Coffe break
9:40-10:10am Andre Seyfarth: Stability and Control in Legged Systems - from models to robots
10:10-10:20am Coffee break
10:20-10:50am R. Brent Gillespie: Sensory feedback and the extended mind
10:50-11:00am Coffee break
11:00-11:30am J.R. Flanagan: Coming to grips with mechanics: predictive control mechanisms in object manipulation
11:30-11:40am Coffee break
11:40-12:10pm Kevin Lynch: Natural Single-Arm Interaction with Programmable Constraints
12:10-12:20pm Coffee break
12:20-12:50pm Mitra Hartmann: What are neurons with multi-whisker receptive fields doing in the brain of the rat and why should you care?
12:50-2:00pm Lunch break
What's the future of muscle, limb, and brain interactions?
2:00-4:45pm Discussion: Topics to be determined